The SPP is also a analog black hole. This quasiparticle accumulates energy
in huge amounts and may become  as massive as 1 million gigavolts. This
particle is also a tachyon that forms a condensate called a tachyon
condensate  according to theory produces particles such as mesons.

On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 6:31 AM, Stephen Cooke <stephen_coo...@hotmail.com>
wrote:

> You might be right Axil, These days I certainly tend to think there is
> some kind of collective disruptive or resonant behaviour that is exciting
> the nuclei or causing them to act this way. I acknowledge your good
> arguments and evidence for the formation of SPP's in these devices. It also
> seems some kind of trigger for collective behaviour is required.
>
> I think its interesting to look at the possibilities of low energy virtual
> resonant meson exchange rather than nucleon exchange. If it can occur.
>
> I'm certainly no expert on this but I suppose if the resonance increases
> slowly (but still fast in atomic scales) the first real *single*
> particles to be generated would be pions? unless particle pairs involving
> electrons, positrons, muons and associated neutrinos are be generated
> before. Is this correct thinking?
>
> pion0 has slightly less mass than pion+ or pion- and has much shorter half
> life so it is curious if we do not see gamma from pion0 decay. Could it be
> that the longer half life of virtual Pion+ and Pion- means in theory are
> more likely to tunnel? Or electrons, muons and pion0 are suppressed somehow
> so that pion+ and pion- are the first to be generated.
>
> I suppose generating a real meson would have higher energy consequences,
> but this could lead to the observed muons.
>
> I'm imagining if the energy is a "slowly" building resonant effect maybe
> as soon as a pion is manifested if it is a pion- perhaps its wave function
> occupies the S orbital to form Pionium until it interacts with the nucleus
> or decays via muon decay. If it is a pion+ perhaps it is ejected with
> sufficient energy to interact with another Deuterium nucleus to form a
> diproton that decays to 2 high energy protons, or it decays to a muon of
> characteristic energy that is later detected.
>
> I suppose a real nuclear physicist will correct me on a lot of my
> assumptions.
>
> ------------------------------
> Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2015 04:16:37 -0400
> Subject: Re: [Vo]:MMDD .... Muon Mediated Deuteron Disintegration
> From: janap...@gmail.com
> To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
>
> I believe that what you imagine is what is happening in one of the many
> cases involving SPP extreme magnetic projections and entanglement,
>

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