At 01:56 PM 8/13/2012, Bastiaan Bergman wrote:
http://physics.aps.org/articles/v5/90
[...]
"What is not known, and remains under considerable debate even now, is
how the energy stored in the magnetic fields is converted into heating
the corona "

Lesson:
We have no freeking clue how fusion works

Well, how hot fusion works is pretty well known. The corona is plasma. If I'm correct, it's not hot enough to result in much fusion. The problem here isn't a lack of understanding of fusion.

Now, Mills has a theory about the corona. That's another matter and doesn't relate to fusion, not there, anyway. In condensed matter, hydrinos, if they exist, might catalyze fusion better than electrons can. Very close hydrinos would almost certainly catalyze fusion.


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