On Nov 17, 2008, at 7:42 AM, Jones Beene wrote:

Today I learned an interesting factoid in passing: the internal magnetic field for the sodium atom has been measured to be on the order of ~30 MG (million Gauss) = ~3,000 T !!


This is not a large value for near nucleus field strength. The dipole field has a ~ 1/r^3 field intensity, so grows arbitrarily large as the the dipole distance r goes to zero. It is thus primarily limited by the particle de Broglie wavelength. For example, the 9.2x10^-17 m de Broglie wavelength electron in the deflated state hydrogen in my theory imposes a 1.5x10^17 T field on the proton at a distance of 1.8x10^-16 m. This characterization of mine is probably wildly off though, due to virtual particle creation and interactions in the deflated state hydrogen, but it demonstrates how large magnetic field can become if the involved wavelengths are short enough.


The source for this information is impeccable, but details are lacking ... but one can assume the field at some unknown distance is the field attributable to the nucleus, independent of the electron and the strong force. Why does it drop off very quickly so that it is essentially absent at a distance of one angstrom?

Because it is a 1/r^3 value.


Consequently it can be said to be "relatively neutron heavy" for its natural place, and possibly that will imply a relative affinity for proton capture without the concomitant evidence of radiation which is normal ... but this situation happens ONLY if the Coulomb barrier is "fooled" by the "virtual neutron" (energy poor). IOW - Mills/BLP set out to prove a theory but instead essentially got lucky, and do not yet have a clue as to what they discovered!

A new form of LENR !

There are many models which involve a "virtual neutron", or in the case of deuterium a "virtual di-neutron", called by many names and having differing justifications and theoretical consequences. My Deflation Fusion model is one such model. One of the fundamental principles of this model is that LENR between the deflated state hydrogen and lattice atoms is energetically favorable strictly due to magnetic attraction, since the Coulomb barrier is completely down to the neutral deflated state hydrogen. The tunneling distance to the lattice atoms is much smaller that to the next hydrogen interstitial site, but the tunneling rate to adjacent unoccupied sites (about 10^12/second) is much higher than to lattice atom sites due to the much higher electrostatic potential involved in inter-site hopping, vs the low magnetic potential involved in the hop to adjacent heavy nuclei. I suggested applying a large magnetic gradient to loaded material as a means of increasing heavy atom interactions. The best way to do this I suggested is to apply the gradient using collimated polarized x-rays. This could produce a volume effect device, as opposed to the present surface effect devices.

[snip]

Jones


Best regards,

Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/




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