Jones Beene wrote: > Paul Lowrance wrote: > > > I guess standard physics states the probabilities exists that a > certain number of fusions occur >> at room temperature, but perhaps in extremely low insignificant amounts. > > You are leaving out the all-important "threshold" level. > > The Boltzmann's tail of the ambient temperature distribution range (300 > K.) almost never gets to that threshold level *alone* ... meaning that > the probability of a single fusion event might be once per billion years > or longer - except - for cosmic rays and other stray forms of high > energy radiation which bombard us constantly, and do have the capability > of increasing the ambient fusion rate by trillions of times... not to > mention the occasional neutrino or stray neutron or solar derived > hydrino or nuclear decay.
I'm curious if any physicist has truly calculated the probability at room temperatures? I doubt it's once per billion years. The probability changes according to duration and material amount, correct?
Regards, Paul Lowrance

