Hi all,

I was wondering about the higher then expected rates of fusion seen in
accelerator experiments at moderate speeds seen by researcher and explained
by electron screening. The fundamental paper Kim et all i basing his theory
on is in a sense interesting and can be a reality, but I did only see that
they manage to fit the model to the data, not really a proof of that the
model explain the phenomena, or am I wrong? What is the general thought
here have we got this result explained or is there more to do?

My thought is the following, if the proton hit the hydrogen atom fast
enough the electron field does not adapt fast enough and I would assume
that the picture is like a bullet penetrating a shield. Here the gamov
factors explain the reaction rate.

As the speed of the impacting proton gets slower, a mysterious effect of a
significant part of the electron will sit beside the two protons as they
approach each other and thereby screening the two fields. I was just
curious how exactly this was so. My problem is that in a sense the incoming
proton needs to push the electron field and keep it situated between them
in order to do any shielding. What is the force causing this? Essentially I
would like to peek into this physics of the system by simulating it in a
computer using QED, but I guess that we cannot do this but rely on
measurements or is it possible? anyone having a clue?

My take on it is that we have a magnetic interaction between the electron
and proton that pushes the electron field and keeps an electric shield
between the two protons. This is an interesting picture, Now consider the
hydrino states of QED. They are unphysical, but probably they show how the
electron distribution would look like if the field was forced closer to the
proton e.g. a very high density of the field close to the visinity of the
proton
also the cost of pushing the electron field like that (at least on one side
of the proton) is energetically not so costly and unstable due to the what
the mathematics of the hydrino QED show, so although the hydrino is an
artefact, the mathematics can have a bearing. Now all this indicates that
in the collision there may also be an electron present (it wnt's to behave
like a hydrino) and hence the nuclear process that yield the helium is
different than what considered normal, it may be so that this can give a
handle to explain why neutrons are a rare event in LENR processes. A very
interesting question is what happens to this physical experiment if the
magnetics is controlled in the experiment, can one increase the rates seen
even further.

So in all I would like to peek into this system to get clues of actual
physics, is it possible?

Cheers!
Stefan

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