Axil—

What is the nature of the fission energy released by Thorium fission reactions? 
 Normal energy is gamma and highly energetic fission debris.  What is the 
coupling mechanism you think occurs to transfer this energy to the SPP’s?

Bob Cook

FRom: Axil Axil
Sent: Thursday, January 26, 2017 2:37 PM
To: vortex-l
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Could the future that started out as cold fusion be ... 
tada... thorium fission ?

https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0906/0906.4268.pdf

Initiation of nuclear reactions under laser irradiation of Au nanoparticles in 
the presence of Thorium aqua-ions 
A.V. Simakin and G.A. Shafeev

The object of this post is to use this experiment to provide insights into the 
structure of the LENR reaction through a structural breakdown of the individual 
LENR mechanisms.

Laser stimulation of gold nanoparticles is a standard nanoplasmonic research 
method. This method produces Surface Plasmon Polaritons (SPP). This method also 
does not generate metallic hydrogen as compared to the compression of hydrogen 
in cracks. The SPPs are formed in the spaces between the gold nanoparticles 
when the nanoparticles are close together and on the surfaces of standalone 
gold nanoparticles.

The storage of high volumes of energy in electromagnetic knots called SPP has a 
major impact on the behavior of the LENR process.

The SPPs reformat the laser light energy into a monopole magnetic bean that 
produces nuclear effects in the atoms in solution that surround the 
nanoparticles but these knots of mostly light energy also store the nuclear 
energy that come from the reactions produced by LENR.

The results of this experiment show how the basic LENR reaction works and how 
the SPP operates within it.

The experiment does produce x-ray and gamma radiation as a result of the 
Limited energy storage provided by the individual SPP. Gamma rays from thorium 
fission are downshifted inside the SPP through self-interference processes 
inherent in the long term energy storage process. The SPP stores the energy 
produced by the fission of thorium and gradually releases it primarily as 
X-rays with a lesser percentage of energy released as weak gamma rays.

Even when the laser light is turned off, energy is released in decreasing 
amounts until all the stored energy is gone.

No long term radioactive isotopes are produced by this reaction showing that 
the weak force is amplified stabilizing these resultant radioactive isotopes.

In comparison with experiments producing metallic hydrogen, energy storage is 
much greater because a Bose condensate of SPPs is able to absorb giga electron 
volts of nuclear power. This increase storage capacity enables the production 
of mesons as the preferred format of the radiation generated by the energy 
release process. Because SPP condensate energy storage capacity is so large, no 
gamma radiation is released by the SPP condensate with almost all of the 
nuclear radiation preferably going into meson creation.

Delayed production of mesons over days indicates a huge amount of nuclear 
energy storage capacity in the SPP condensate is available that is not present 
when only single SPPs manage nuclear energy release.

On Wed, Jan 25, 2017 at 3:31 PM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:
Thirty to forty years ago, muon-induced fission was a hot topic.
Most of the radioactive heavy metal actinides were found to undergo prompt or 
delayed fission when placed in a muon flux. This includes thorium. The coupling 
is not huge but it is significant.
However, at that time the economics of producing large numbers of muons was 
prohibitive and the field of inquiry dried up. Here is an old paper.
http://www.iaea.org/inis/collection/NCLCollectionStore/_Public/12/609/12609441.pdf
Muons were produced in a beam line for most of these studies. There is no 
possibility of a self-sustaining chain reaction, as with neutron mediated 
fission, although fission does produce some additional muons. Thus, a high flux 
must be maintained. 
But... fast forward forty years to Holmlid, and reassess the situation ... What 
if muons can be produced millions of time easier and cheaper, using UDD and the 
Holmlid effect?
If he is correct, a heavy flux of muons is produced via laser instead of beam 
line, meaning that size can be reduced greatly and cost and form factor 
minimized. When thorium is the target for muon induced fission, it becomes 
useful without adding fissile material and it is far more plentiful than 
uranium and the proliferation risk disappears as well as 90% of the cost of 
dealing with neutrons and critical mass. 
Win, win, win, win.
This is a paradigm shift in assumptions, leading to something unexpected. 
"Small-scale fission courtesy of cold fusion." 
Even Holmlid has overlooked the possibility of muon-induced fission of thorium 
(at least it does not turn up in a search of his papers.



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