Perhaps the 'secret' catalyst is the Nickel and its catalyzing the fusion of H 
into He...

-Mark

  _____  

From: Axil Axil [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, April 15, 2011 2:11 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:About isotopic ratio on spent fuel (E-Cat)


Thank you for your insight. 

 

"If there is anything nuclear, and the metal isotope distribution is natural - 
then it is almost a
guarantee that it must involve only hydrogen, no metal."

 

This is probable true.

 

Would it not be ironic that the fusion/fission of just hydrogen produces nickel 
and copper without
nickel entering into the reaction in any way, contray to what Rossi thinks?

 

I am surprised that you are not well versed in the work of the LENR team: Dr H. 
Hora, and Dr. G.H.
Miley. From a large volume of LENR experimental results, Dr Miley has developed 
a theory of LENR
transmutation that predicts this natural abundance of isotopes around the magic 
atomic numbers of

2, 6, 14, 28, 50, 82, 126.

Now, 28 is the atomic number of nickel, and the fission of the super atom 
formed during the fusion
of many atoms will result in an array of elements that cluster around peaks 
defined by these magic
numbers:

2 - helium
6 - carbon
14 - silicon
28 - nickel

There will be many transmutation events producing nickel whose atomic number 
(A) is 28, but also
some lesser amounts producing copper (A = 29) and even less zinc (A = 30).

On the other side of the Boltzmann quark distribution described by the 
expression N(Z) = N' exp
(-Z/Z') where Z' = 10. 

You get more cobalt (A = 27) and even less Iron (A = 26).

All these elements have been seen is Rossi ash.

Around the lower order magic numbers carbon (A = 6) and silicon(A = 14) are 
clustered the following
elements:


8 - Oxygen
9 - Fluorine(captured to form fluorides)
10 - Neon (outgased ?)
11 - Sodium
12 - Magnesium
13- Silicon (mentioned as ash)
14 - Phosphorus
15 - Sulfur (mentioned as ash)
16 - Chlorine (mentioned as ash)
17 - Argon (outgased ?)
18 - Potassium (mentioned as ash)
19 - Calcium (mentioned as ash)



A further consequence of the LENR evaluation leads to the ratios R (n) (n = 1, 
2, 3.) of the
Boltzmann probabilities, namely R (n) = 3n. This suggests a threefold property 
of stable
configurations at magic numbers in nuclei, consistent with a quark property.


It is as if a large amount of hydrogen atoms form into a cold plasma  go into a 
quantum mechanical
blender and turned into a coherent quark soup. In an instant, when the quark 
soup fissions, this
LENR process produces atoms whose isotopic character is the same as exists in 
nature. This is to be
expected since the inherent properties of quarks define what comes out of the 
fission process. This
LENR fission process is done so gently and at such low energies that no 
unstable (radioactive)
elements are produced.

Emitted X-rays energies correspond to the speeds of these various fission 
fragments rebounding away
from the center of this fission process.







On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 4:07 PM, Mattia Rizzi <[email protected]> wrote:


>When the Reaction first begins, the isotopic ratios could be random
 
No.
Isotopic ratio from natural background is constant, with low deviation.
 
>in the same way that a few samples among a population will produce widely 
>varied statistics.
 
Check how many atoms (and isotopes) are contained inside 1g of matter.
 
> the isotopic ratios begin to resolve around a natural distribution
 
This is non-sense. A nuclear reaction should produce non-natural distributions.


From: Axil Axil <mailto:[email protected]>  
Sent: Friday, April 15, 2011 9:42 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [Vo]:About isotopic ratio on spent fuel (E-Cat)

Could another variable be the amount of time that the ash spends in the Rossi 
reactor? When the
Reaction first begins, the isotopic ratios could be random in the same way that 
a few samples among
a population will produce widely varied statistics.

 

But when the reactor runs for a very long time, the isotopic ratios begin to 
resolve around a
natural distribution, much like a large statistical sample will produce a 
reliable description of a
large population.

 

The isotopic ratios might all depend (as a function of time) on the way the ash 
was produced.




On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 9:26 AM, Peter Gluck <[email protected]> wrote:


The simplest explanation of this contradiction is that "they" do not want to 
tell what the isotopic
ratio of Cu is- and will not tell till the scientific report of the Bologna 
Univ. is published. 
Unnnatural, natural? The first is a mistery at the 2nd power, the other a 
mystery at the 3rd power. 


On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 4:10 PM, Mattia Rizzi <[email protected]> wrote:


On january 2010 "A new energy source" they say that the isotpic ratio of Cu is 
nearly natural
background.
Source: http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/FocardiSanewenergy.pdf
On March 2010 they correct it and say that isotopic ration of Cu is different 
from background.
http://www.nyteknik.se/incoming/article3080659.ece/BINARY/Rossi-Focardi_paper.pdf




-- 
Dr. Peter Gluck 
Cluj, Romania
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com




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