Jones—

You note: “The aim of any alternative energy effort is generally this - go 
small, go simple and go cheap - forget the large expensive grid plant and find 
solutions for small scale implementation.”

Not to be critical, but you sound like a progressive with the design objectives 
you identify.  The established energy industries will find it hard to continue 
their global control with the popularization of those ideas.  

That’s what that is 😉.

Let’s hope there are no fast neutrons involved as Robin has suggested.   Fast 
muons are bad enough IMHO to make a muon thorium reaction attractive to the 
established government-energy complexes.  Think about how much that 
establishment has fostered the hot fusion technology.

I hope that LENR+ and muons do not co-exist.  

I do think that debunking the Standard Theory may be the best outcome of 
Holmild’s work.  Why do you think he got so little support from the Standard 
Theory boys at CERN and elsewhere?  

Bob Cook

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

From: Jones Beene
Sent: Thursday, January 26, 2017 8:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Could the future that started out as cold fusion be ... 
tada... thorium fission ?

Robin wrote

You would get a far greater yield from your muons, if you use muon catalyzed T-D
fusion to create 14 MeV neutrons that directly fission a Thorium blanket.

Hi,

Well, there is no evidence for this conclusion insofar as "greater yield" is 
concerned. This is because we do not know the details of the energy release 
from muon induced fission in thorium. It could be more or less than a two stage 
process involving fast neutrons and it would not be a surprise if it was 
actually more.

At any rate, the energy release is so massive in either case that the output 
difference is irrelevant considering the extra risk and cost of tritium. What 
we do know is that tritium is a serious proliferation risk and costs 
$30,000/gram. The aim of any alternative energy effort is generally this - go 
small, go simple and go cheap - forget the large expensive grid plant and find 
solutions for small scale implementation. 

One more detail: since muon induced fission is not a neutron mediated process, 
it is possible that minimally refined monazite ore can be used in place of 
refined thorium metal. This would make it attractive for countries like  India, 
with massive deposits of ore and massive need of energy at the lowest possible 
cost.


Reply via email to