We need to keep the time axis stationary and talk about a molecule's rate of 
Speed along the time axis.  Setting up the math any other way would be a tough 
task!

 

Scott
 


Date: Thu, 15 Apr 2010 17:18:54 +0000
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Warm fission -> decay fusion -> Arata





Jones,
                Re-read your paragraph at bottom and now see more clearly what 
you were trying to say re-the time dilation argument – regardless Of whether 
this is normal trig relationship between acceleration on the spatial vs the 
time axis or as I mentioned another type
Where the time axis moves faster instead the issue remains that the double beta 
decay is too long compared to the dilation causing f/h.  I Have said previously 
that we are trading time for energy and the hydrogen returned from the cavity 
is much older than the hydrogen entering The cavity. That said however,  I 
don’t think the electron velocity of C/137 calculated by Bourgoin’s 07 paper 
"INVERSE QUANTUM STATES OF HYDROGEN" would Be enough to accumulate as you say a 
half life longer than the age of the universe. I am not saying that C/137 is a 
limit but it is one of the few Numerical relationships I can cite for the 
relativistic interpretation – I’ll have to look at Naudts math again which 
isn’t based on a fractional orbit but it is magnitudes larger –more like the 
value you would need for decay.
Best Regards
Fran
 
 
[quote]However, the double beta decay rate is slow to begin with (half-life is
longer than the age of the universe) . consequently, to make a large
difference, there needs to be much more than (or in addition to) a massive
time alteration. IOW there must more going-on than the time factor alone
influencing the decay rate - and that is where a nuclear charge alteration,
brought on by the close approach of a partially shielded positive charge,
like a deuteron (as opposed to a proton which has no partial shielding)
could come into play.[/quote]
 
                                          
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