Thanks, Axil Does Piantelli have a theory of what reaction pathway produces the protons?
> The holy grail of the hot fusion folks is to achieve Aneutronic fusion. > The > (11B + p) reaction is the best example. This sort of fusion produces most > of its energy in the form of charged particles rather than neutrons. > > According to Piantelli, his device produces loads of protons. > > Most of this Ni-H reaction energy should be converted to electricity using > a direct proton conversion scheme where hydrogen is produced from protons > after they attract electrons in an electric circuit. > > Forget steam production; a well-engineered Ni-H reactor might form the > heart of an efficient proton generating nuclear battery. > > > > On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 3:27 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 11:40 AM, Peter Heckert >> <[email protected]> >> > wrote: >> > Hi, >> > >> >lets assume this works and it emits gamma radiation. >> >Gamma thermalization is improbable. >> >> Perhaps it is improbable, but to account for unexpectedly low >> gamma-radiation Peter Hagelstein proposed his "Lossy Spin-Boson" theory >> which indicates a way high energy gammas may be split up and >> thermalized. >> >> Also, Allan Widom (of Widom-Larsen) has a patent entitled - >> "Apparatus and Method for Absorption of Incident Gamma Radiation and its >> Conversion to Outgoing Radiation at Less Penetrating, Lower Energies and >> Frequencies" >> >> http://www.slideshare.net/lewisglarsen/lattice-energy-llc-issuance-announcementus-patent-no-7893414-feb-22-2011 >> >> Then, there are observations from the 1930s - >> "Phenomena Associated with the Anomalous Absorption of High Energy Gamma >> Radiation" http://www.jstor.org/pss/96159 >> >> I'm not sure whether any of these are correct, but if LENR is real, does >> anyone have other explanations for the missing gammas? >> >> Thanks, >> Lou Pagnucco >> >> >> >> >

