Axil, Jones, Robin and Eric--

The following abstract is about Weyl Fermions and the conversion of fermions to 
bosons in a neutrino field--

We study fermion-boson transitions. Our approach is based on the
3 × 3 subequations of Dirac and Duffin-Kemmer-Petiau equations, which
link these equations. We demonstrate that free Dirac equation can be
invertibly converted to spin-0 Duffin-Kemmer-Petiau equation in presence
of a neutrino field. We also show that in special external fields, upon
assuming again existence of a neutrino (Weyl) spinor, the Dirac equation
can be transformed reversibly to spin-0 Duffin-Kemmer-Petiau equation.
We argue that such boson-fermions transitions are consistent with the
main channel of pion decay.

See the following reference:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/1504.04348.pdf

Bob Cook







From: Axil Axil 
Sent: Friday, July 17, 2015 12:52 PM
To: vortex-l 
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Re: Rossi's theory of the LENR reaction

The new particle, Weyl Fermions is a Quasiparticle. It does not exist as a 
seperate particle. The electron is made up of a number of properties that can 
be seperated out and expressed in interactions with condensed matter. This 
special crystal stucture where the Weyl was found does that seperation.  Since 
the Weyl Fermion is massless and exists at the speed of light, this implies 
that certain electron properties produce mass by interacting with the higgs 
field.  

On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 3:07 PM, Bob Cook <[email protected]> wrote:

  The coupling of fermions via spin with nucleons to allow mass conversion may 
require many coherent ferimons to improve the odds that spin, angular momentum 
charge and mass can be conserved.  A  special nano structure with a varying 
magnetic field and resonant temperature conditions (lattice vibrations) may be 
what is necessary.

  At least that is what seems generally   involved in reported test parameters 
in Pd and Ni systems.

  The LENR reaction parameters are not the same as appear to control particles 
with significant kinetic energy and linear momentum where mass is changed to 
energy.   IMHO the coherent nano systems must couple in a different manner than 
occurs in particle collision reactions.   Free high energy entities do not seem 
to happen very often because the multi-body  system is not configured properly 
most of the time.

  Bob Cook

  ppen in

  -----Original Message----- From: Jones Beene
  Sent: Friday, July 17, 2015 6:44 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: RE: [Vo]:Re: Rossi's theory of the LENR reaction

  Sounds a bit like a new type of fermionm

  http://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/semiconductors/materials/exotic-particles
  -could-lead-to-faster-electronics



  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected]


  In reply to  Eric Walker's message of Thu, 16 Jul 2015 12:58:49 -0500:
  Hi,
  [snip]

    Now I wonder whether it would be possible to conserve spin with the
    appropriate selection of electrons:

       -1/2 + 1/2 + -1/2 + 1/2 + ... + 1/2 + 1/2 = 1

    Each electron will in turn emit a photon, which is again angular
    momentum n=1, so I'm not sure how that factors in as a consideration.

    It seems improbable to me that there would be two [dd]* resonances with
    antiparallel spin underway at the same time.


  This is an interesting idea, but again the question arises, why doesn't this
  happen with normal decay reactions?

  Regards,

  Robin van Spaandonk

  http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html


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