It is possible that whatever it is Cambridge may have found relative to muons also relates to surprisingly efficient muon production in the Holmlid/Norront reactor... apparently there is a mystery particle which affects muons in a previously unknown way ?
BTW from their site, Norront have 3 muon reactors working in Norway and one in Sweden. Things are getting interesting... This whole UDD > muon thing may be near, or even gone past the proverbial "tipping point"... when we look back on it in a couple of years. Jones H LV wrote: PBS Space Time Why the Muon g-2 Results Are So Exciting! https://youtu.be/O4Ko7NW2yQo Harry Muons: 'Strong' evidence found for a new force of natur https://www.bbc.com/news/56643677 quotes: .... There is currently a one in a 40,000 chance that the result could be a statistical fluke - equating to a statistical level of confidence described as 4.1 sigma. A level of 5 sigma, or a one in 3.5 million chance of the observation being a coincidence, is needed to claim a discovery. .... Prof Ben Allanach, from Cambridge University, who was not involved with the latest effort, said: "My Spidey sense is tingling and telling me that this is going to be real. .... The Muon g-2 experiment involves sending the particles around a 14-metre ring and then applying a magnetic field. Under the current laws of physics, encoded in the Standard Model, this should make the muons wobble at a certain rate. Instead, the scientists found that muons wobbled at a faster rate than expected. This might be caused by a force of nature that's completely new to science.....Harry

