Axil--

Your idea is interesting--it may be related to the torsion field that Russian 
astronomers have proposed, that expands to infinity and controls systems with 
any net angular momentum.  This field could be the entity that assures the 
conservation of angular momentum.  (Spin and angular momentum are basically the 
same characteristic of fields, or potentially, a combination of fields.  Fields 
may be the only reality. The material existence is nothing more than the stable 
arrangement of fields on a micro, nano, plank dimension scale.  Space and time 
are not fields but pertinent items in the arrangement of fields. 

In the context of a new mythology or theory of everything,

Bob
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Axil Axil 
  To: vortex-l 
  Sent: Sunday, February 01, 2015 3:56 PM
  Subject: Re: [Vo]:Gamma-producing fusion branches and solid state matter


  For the first time, I like to put forward for your consideration a 
speculation which postulates the formation of a unified fundamental force. This 
is the elemental force that Einstein was after for over 40 years until his 
death. Produced in the right type of system, this long sought after global 
force is one in which the electromagnetic field gains sufficient strength 
through the additive accumulation of polarized angular momentum or spin  to 
combine with both the weak force and the strong force.




  This fundamental force tends to  relax more energetic atomic systems to both 
transfer the resultant  excess energy of excitation through a common wave based 
conduit and also down shift this energy to the matter that has produced the 
amplified EMF.




  The EMF amplification mechanism is the result of the  additive nature of EMF. 
Like gravity, polarized spin can accumulate in unlimited amounts in the same 
way that gravity accumulates strength though the unlimited addition of mass to 
form the most powerful force in nature. In this way, the additive nature of 
gravity can transform this most  feeble force in nature into a process that is 
so powerful that it can rip space and time apart to produce black holes of 
gigantic size. 






  On Sun, Aug 25, 2013 at 3:48 PM, Eric Walker <[email protected]> wrote:

    I'm including a brief synthesis of some of the thoughts that have been 
discussed on this list concerning a possibly novel interaction between 
gamma-producing fusion branches and solid state matter.  This synthesis 
elaborates on a thought experiment that at this time lacks the rigor of 
something that would be turned into in a paper.  My hope is that it can 
nonetheless be further refined as one step towards a more rigorous 
presentation, should that come about at some point.


    Although the discussion below focuses on PdD somewhat, hopefully it will be 
clear that it applies equally to NiH(D). I see more promise in NiH and simply 
feel a desire to try to pick up some longstanding questions that have been 
raised in connection with PdD, which for most investigators is a system that is 
more familiar and better understood.  For the most part I have been focused on 
NiH.


    Eric










    Since late 2011 there has been a discussion about a new way that the 
gamma-producing fusion branches might interact with matter, first set out to my 
knowledge in a post by Ron Maimon to the physics site physics.stackexchange.com 
[1].  During 2012 and into 2013 that thread has been picked up on Vortex-L and 
the idea extended and modified.  The foundation for the speculations here is 
not yet rigorous, so they are only a thought experiment at this point.  But, 
phenomenologically, they go a long way to explain persistent and quirky details 
of the cold fusion experiments that have been described in Ed Storms's book and 
review articles and by others, elsewhere.  For this reason I think the thought 
experiment merits a restatement and consideration of some observations it might 
explain as well as some new predictions.  I'll try to do each of these things 
in turn.


    To recap, the original proposal was that in the context of a palladium 
lattice the gamma-producing dd fusion branch interacts electromagnetically with 
lattice site nuclei instead of producing a gamma photon.  The result is that 
you would get a prompt 4He that, when born, pushes off of a nearby heavy 
palladium nucleus. The heart of the idea is that the energy is yielded in a 
(near-) instantaneous electromagnetic transfer with the palladium lattice site. 
 The gamma, which takes a long time to be emitted, is competetively suppressed 
and the energy is translated into kinetic energy of the daughter 4He and the 
palladium lattice site.  This happens because the electromagnetic interaction 
is very fast compared to gamma photon emission.  The process is so fast in fact 
that it also competes favorably with the other dd branches, which involve the 
production of energetic charged particles and neutrons (a slower process).  The 
discussion here has run with Ron's idea and modified and extended it.  The 
extension is to all gamma-producing fusion branches, and not just d(d,ɣ)4He, 
and to electromagnetic interaction not only with lattice site nuclei but also 
with the ambient electronic structure of the metal lattice.  The modification 
involves how the chain reaction proceeds.  Whereas Ron proposes that energetic 
charged deuterons drive the reaction in a very specific way (see [1] for the 
full discussion), the proposal here is that all electromagnetic interactions, 
whether directly with the electronic structure or indirectly through 
disruptions resulting from the motion of fast charged particles, proceed to 
modify the charge density in the metal lattice such that screening or possibly 
a mechanism similar to that of the Polywell reactor [2] makes dd fusion and pd 
fusion orders of magnitude more likely.


    The motivation for the approach of this thought experiment is twofold.  The 
first reason this hypothetical mechanism is attractive is that it has a good 
phenomenological fit to the cold fusion experimental observations.  A second 
reason is that to my knowledge it does not depart too far from conventional 
physics.  While it is true that a few assumptions must be reexamined, our basic 
understanding of physical laws and interactions need not be set aside, in 
connection, for example, with the strong interaction, the weak interaction and 
Coulomb repulsion.


    Now for the observations and predictions.


    1. In PdD electrolytic experiments, 4He seems to be produced at or close to 
the surface of the cathode.


    The main reason for this belief is that the 4He, which is thought to be the 
primary ash of PdD cold fusion, is found near the surface and less and less as 
towards the bulk of the palladium cathode.  Because 4He is not mobile in 
palladium (except when there are fissures and cracks), it cannot migrate out of 
the cathode in the same way that deuterium can.  This means that any 4He that 
is detected at or near the surface that is the result of a fusion process will 
have been produced at or near the surface.  The requirement for surface or 
near-surface production of 4He in the PdD electrolytic system does not seem to 
be a hard and fast one, but there are several lines of evidence that point in 
that direction.


    If the mechanism proposed here holds, the reason for this would be 
straightforward.  Electrical current can be expected, through the mechanism of 
this thought experiment, to bring alter the charge density of the lattice site 
nuclei.  The electron charge would then become more evenly distributed 
throughout the lattice and into the interstitial areas, rather than being 
concentrated around the lattice sites as it normally is.  The cause for the 
change in charge density is not yet clear -- in this case it could be through 
interactions between migrating electrons with more tightly bound electrons.  
But because current flows primarily through the skin of a conductor and less 
and less towards the center, one would see less and less of the effect with 
increasing depth into the cathode.


    2. In PdD electrolytic experiments, it can take a while for an effect to be 
seen.
    3. In PdD electrolytic experiments, there seems to be a relationship 
between impurities and an effect.  Excess heat may not be seen in a pure 
palladium cathode, for example, whereas it may be seen increasingly effectively 
in a cathode which has undergone prior electrolysis and has acquired impurities 
through the process of electrolysis.


    It would seem that impurities play a role of some kind.  One thought here 
is that in order for the charge density to be altered, the energy within the 
electronic structure must be allowed to increase.  This process can be expected 
to be defeated if electrons are mobile throughout the cathode.  If there are 
dielectric impurities that have the effect of isolating certain portions of the 
cathode into their own insulated islands, the average energy of the electronic 
structure within those islands can be expected to increase.  In a fresh 
cathode, there may be few impurities and insulated islands of this type.  After 
a long period of electrolysis, however, there may be more and more insulated 
islands that can retain energy in this way, facilitating the modification of 
the charge distribution and hence the shielding mentioned above.


    4. In cold fusion experiments, one often sees strange transients in the 
current, in which the current increases for periods of time.


    This detail was noted by Abd sometime back [3].  One possible explanation 
here would be that the process being proposed has two branches -- one is the 
electrostatic dumping of the energy of a fusion directly into the electronic 
structure, and the other the creation of kinetic energy as the 4He daughter (in 
the case of PdD) pushes off of a lattice site.  The former branch is relevant 
here, as it seems to be equivalent to a spark discharge into the electron cloud 
of around 24 MeV (or 5 MeV).  If enough of these events occurred, one supposes 
there would be an increase in current at the macroscopic level and an apparent 
decrease in resistivity.


    5. In cold fusion experiments, very little prompt radiation is seen.


    This is an observation that Ed has steadfastly defended and that I have 
only reluctantly come around to after reading through some of the early papers. 
 Now that there is a mechanism that makes sense to me that does not purely 
involve fast particles (such as the one proposed by Ron Maimon in [1]), I'm 
more open-minded to cold fusion products being born without kinetic energy.  
This backtracking on my part inverts the old saying that seeing is believing -- 
here we have something like, "having a believable explanation is seeing."


    The lack of prompt radiation suggests that of the two different branches 
proposed -- one in which the decaying [dd]* or [pd]* intermediate state 
electrostatically dumps directly into the electronic structure, and the other 
in which the resulting 4He or 3He pushes off of a lattice site -- it would seem 
to be the first branch that is dominant.  In that branch, one expects 4He and 
3He to be born almost motionless, and the momentum of the reaction to be 
carried away primarily by the electronic structure.  Here it may be the local 
region of the electron cloud as a whole that receives the momentum, or, 
alternatively, a single electron.  In the former case there would be almost no 
Bremsstrahlung.  In the latter case, which would result in a ~24 MeV or ~5 MeV 
electron, one would expect Bremsstrahlung.


    6. Excess heat has been seen in zeolites impregnated with palladium.


    Because the zeolite matrix is an electrical insulator, the energy of the 
electronic structure in the palladium particles embedded within it can be 
allowed to increase over time, altering thereby through some as-yet-discovered 
phenomenon the distribution of charge density.  This is similar to the possible 
role played by impurities mentioned above in connection with (2) and (3).


    7. In PdD electrolytic experiments, cracks seem to play an important role.  
I'm going to guess that this is straightforward and is due to hydrons being 
kept apart within the octahedral and tetrahedral sites in an fcc lattice even 
further than when they are bound in molecular form.  In order for screening to 
play a role, one presumes that it would be better to have vacancies and cracks, 
where the hydrogen is mobile.


    Now for some possibilities and predictions.


    1. Dopants added to the substrate may have an effect on how easy or hard it 
is to start or sustain a reaction.  Because dopants often either add to or take 
away electrons from the ambient electron cloud, one expects them to have some 
kind of effect in all of this, although the exact result would not be clear.



    2. Modifications to the behavior of a system under a magnetic field can be 
expected.  The decay of the [dd]* or [pd]* intermediate state via electrostatic 
transfer of energy either into the ambient electron cloud or with a lattice 
site is essentially an electromagnetic phenomenon.  One expects, then, there to 
be some kind of effect when a magnetic field is applied, although the precise 
nature of the effect is not clear.


    3. Gamma-producing branches may not be required for cold fusion.  Reactions 
that yield fast charged particles can be also be expected to alter the electron 
charge density within the lattice by way of the hypothetical mechanism of this 
thought experiment.  But it may be that gamma-producing reactions are 
competitively favored for reasons not yet understood.  Even if this is the 
case, it would not be surprising if precursors within the substrate that when 
fused do not decay to a gamma will still fuse, via the same screening or 
Polywell mechanism that leads to the dd or pd fusion.  In that case the 
resulting kinetic energy of the particles would contribute to the modification 
of the charge density, but you would also see the kind of Bremsstrahlung 
expected from fast particles.


    4. Sparks, natural alpha emitters and natural beta emitters (radioactive 
and thermionic) can be expected to catalyze a cold fusion reaction.  Fast alpha 
and beta particles will presumably alter the electronic structure in the manner 
required to get a chain reaction going and to sustain it.  This suggests that 
Rossi's temperature-activated catalyst is a thermionic emitter, which emits 
beta particles when heated.  One suspects there is a similar function being 
played by Defkalion's spark plugs.  Dave and Alan, who have been modeling the 
thermodynamics of these systems, might want to take into account a temperature 
activated catalyst of some kind.








    [1] http://physics.stackexchange.com/a/13734/6713
    [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polywell
    [3] http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg67322.html



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