Horace:

The problem I see with some kind of outside trigger is that the "turn-on" of
excess heat would occur randomly. how does one control when that cosmic ray
or muon will initiate the reaction?  In one of the demos, it appeared to
turn on at a specific temperature.

-mark

 

From: Horace Heffner [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, December 22, 2011 1:32 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]: Cosmic Trigger?

 

I just saw this post.  I am only reading about 1 in 20 posts due to lack of
time.  I hope if anything technical develops in long threads that new
threads with meaningful titles are created. 

 

 

On Dec 20, 2011, at 8:41 AM, David Roberson wrote:





On an earlier post I suggested that the LENR reactions such as those
exhibited by Rossi could have been triggered by cosmic rays.  I was a little
disappointed by the few comments that were generated and I was hoping to
further study this possibility.

One of the main skeptic positions is that it takes far more energy to
activate the fusion like reaction than is available at normal temperatures.
Why should we limit our thoughts to some form of steady state conditions for
the initiation of the reactions when it may just take some triggering events
to overcome the barriers?  How many different initiation locations are
required to make a block of TNT explode?  Hopefully these are not occurring
randomly, and if they were, who could store the material safely?

Let's try to determine whether or not the basic cosmic ray trigger concept
is possible.  If it is, what evidence should we look for in an effort to
make that determination?

First, is there enough energy available within a cosmic ray to activate a
LENR reaction at any location within a nickel-hydrogen complex?  Mr. Cude
suggests that it takes in excess of 100 keV to overcome the proton to nickel
coulomb barrier.  His number seems agreeable to me, and now the question is
whether or not this can be obtained by cosmic ray collisions?

Second, if a small volume of material achieves reaction and releases several
MeV of energy does the material then allow the reaction to spread?  Of
course the release of many MeV at the active region now would be adequate to
enable more reactions since it far exceeds the 100 keV threshold suggested
if in the correct form.  Is there evidence pro or con as to whether or not
this is happening?

Third, are the pits seen on the electrodes of electrolysis type systems an
indication that small regions are undergoing some form of extreme spot
heating?  Could this crater forming type of event suggest that miniature
reactions involving millions of atoms are occurring?  If so, why does the
reaction head along one main path toward the surface instead of spread out
uniformly?  Could it be that the reaction follows the path of one of the
suspect cosmic ray particles as it moves like a bulldozer through the
matrix?  Is it possible that the energy is released in a favorable direction
to conserve momentum?

Forth, I was reading that muons are one of the main particles remaining once
a cosmic ray reaches the ground level.  Have they been shown to activate
cold fusion reactions in lab experiments and considered a well respected
proven concept?  I understand that the normal process is for DT reactions to
be catalyzed, but there is mention of formation of a neutron like atomic
structure.   The size of this combination proton-muon group is extremely
tiny and might be capable of overcoming the coulomb barrier by tunneling
into the nickel nucleus.  Why could this not happen within the Rossi type
reactor where hydrogen gas is held within a high temperature and pressure
environment?  Could this then deliver the triggering energy needed?

 

The muon reaction does not work for p + p because p + p is a weak reaction,
thus has a very small cross section, very small reaction distance.   It
requires (in nuclear terms) a much long exposure time and much closer
proximity than D+D, D+T or P+D.

 





As you can see, I have listed a lot of questions that seek answers.  The
vortex community has numerous experts available that could help enlighten me
and others if they would take a little time to consider these questions.  I
would find your responses as a well deserved break from the endless semantic
games that are filling the bandwidth.  Was the vortex originally formed as a
collection of scientifically interested persons intending to discuss new
concepts?  Please demonstrate that we are here to work together instead of
arguing endlessly.  Thanks guys.

Dave

 

In my deflation fusion theory the Coulomb barrier is overcome due to
formation of a small magnetic force based electron orbital.  The resulting
hydrogen is neutral, thus there is no Coulomb barrier to it tunneling into a
nearby nucleus as an ensemble.  Further, magnetic gradients make the
tunneling energy positive, thus greatly increasing the tunneling range, and
thus reducing the lattice half-life of such an entity. 

 

Anything that increases electron density and flux around/through absorbed
hydrogen nuclei, without destroying the lattice, increases the density of
the deflated state and the probability of fusion.  I think controlled
electron  flux is much better than electrons freed by cosmic rays, because
lattice destruction should be much less in comparison.  There are various
means of inducing dense electron flux on nanoparticle surfaces. 

 

Best regards,

 

Horace Heffner

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

 





 

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