-----Original Message-----
From: MarkI-ZeroPoint 

1. If a neutron can disappear into the vacuum, then:
        1a. Can a neutron pop INTO this space (spontaneous formation)?

Let me just say this. There have been for a long time - reports of spontaneous 
(anomalous) hydrogen showing up in extreme vacuum conditions. Hydrogen from 
nowhere, essentially. But that phenomenon, if true, has morphed into fringe 
religious bogosity so one hesitates to even mention it. There was an article in 
IE and it has been picked up here, for what it is worth:

http://blog.hasslberger.com/2006/06/hydrogen_from_space_the_aether.html

This is not the same as neutrons from nowhere, except that the neutron has only 
a short half-life, and you expect to see hydrogen in the end. Does that account 
for the hydrogen phenomenon, and if so, where is the decay energy? Does 
trans-dimensional transfer happen isothermally, regardless? (at least from the 
perspective of the host)

That would be the only way it could happen.

Jones




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