Perhaps it is as simple as what you suggest CB, but does that explain every case? Can we be confident that there are no future particles to be discovered that behave in a different manner although they have similar spins? If not, then why call it something fancy like the Pauli exclusion principle instead of just spin states? I suspect a more complex underlying cause exists. Do you suppose I am becoming too skeptical?
Dave -----Original Message----- From: CB Sites <[email protected]> To: vortex-l <[email protected]> Sent: Mon, Oct 26, 2015 12:48 am Subject: Re: [Vo]:slide deck for ultradense hydrogen / Leif Holmlid Dave, Doesn't the Pauli exclusion principle come about from the quantum mechanical magnetic moment of the particle's spin state. That would seem to be a physical attribute of the particle and not something that can easily be wiped away. On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 12:39 AM, CB Sites <[email protected]> wrote: Thanks Eric. There are a lot of interesting ideas presented in that slide show, many of the ideas I've seen commented on here. In one of his last slides he mentions theoretical solutions, one being multibody fusion hinting at a Chubb's style n-body fusion. Conceptually I've always found the S & T Chubb line of theory for cold fusion to be elegant and plausible. There is no reason why N-body solid state quantum mechanics can't apply to hydrogen in metal like it does to electrons in a metal. Quantum band states of H on Ni have been demonstrated (as a surface effect). *Sorry I don't recall the 1980's paper* I think it was in Science. Anyway, as new experimental developments have come about, the solid state concepts applied to protium/metal make their theories less applicable. The Rydberg atomic fusion process would seem interesting if not so far fetched. Maybe if I understood the quantum mechanics of how a Rydberg atom formed in a metal lattice at temps above room temperature. And then how to prove it. I think I need to understand the theory a little more. On Sun, Oct 25, 2015 at 11:07 PM, Eric Walker <[email protected]> wrote: On Sun, Oct 25, 2015 at 9:52 PM, CB Sites <[email protected]> wrote: I found that to be a very interesting slide show. Is there an audio/video track of the lecture to go with it? That is from HyperPhysics, a Web site authored largely by Rod Nave, now a retired physics professor from Georgia State University. There is no accompanying audio or video that I am aware of. It's inspired by the old HyperCard program. I have found it a very useful site. Eric

