The knock on cold fusion over the years has been lack of neutrons. Yet that 
"lack" is not accurate.

As it turns out, 15 years ago Mizuno and others performed a defining 
experiment. 
Problem is... almost nobody quotes it today, or even knows about it.
"Neutron emission from D2 gas in magnetic fields under low temperature" is the 
paper from 2004.
Mizuno, Akimoto, Takahashi and Francesco 
Celanihttp://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MizunoTneutronemi.pdf
Summary
"We observed neutron emissions from pure deuterium gas after it was cooled in 
liquid
nitrogen and placed in a magnetic field. Neutron emissions were observed in ten 
out of ten
test cases. Neutron burst ... were 1000 times higher than the background 
counts....We 
observed a clear neutron energy peak at 2.5MeV." (indicates d-d nuclear fusion)
Comment: why is this study not given the credit it deserves? The authors are 
top notch. 
The results are astounding. The experiment was partially replicated by Ahern at 
MIT. 

The neutron bursts align with cosmic ray bursts (which create muons which then 
catalyze fusion). 

The solenoid magnetic field of .8 T is large, but could be obtained using 
permanent magnets.

This experiment begs to be replicated today using permanent magnets and a tiny 
muon source using laser irradiation.


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