If it involves a "shock procedure" it sounds similiar to the
piezonuclear systems studied by Cardone et al
and they too obeserved neutrons.

Piezonuclear neutrons from fracturing of inert solids
http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0903/0903.3104.pdf
(This was published in Physics Letters A)

Harry

On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 5:37 PM, Robert Lynn
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Neutrons are hard to shield and when absorbed can produce radioactive
> materials. Could this be a potentially killer blow to otherwise safe LENR?
>
> Fission reactors typically create up to 10^13 neutrons per cm² per second,
> and this experiment was only making about 200000 per s, over (I assume) the
> full 4Pi sphere but was also probably only a few watts of power.  If this is
> a standard feature of LENR and is scaled up to 10's or 100's of kW for
> transport applications maybe we are looking at more like 10^10 per s will it
> be ultimately be dangerous?  The oil industry will be looking for exactly
> this sort of flaw to keep themselves in business.
>
> Why haven't other researchers seen Neutrons, were they not looking or are
> they at too low an energy or flux to be easily detected?
>
> On 17 August 2012 22:10, Akira Shirakawa <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> On 2012-08-17 20:39, [email protected] wrote:
>>>
>>> Absolute confirmation of Nuclear Fusion from deuterated titanium using
>>> shock
>>> procedure
>>> - Mark Prelas: 62Million Neutrons within 5 minutes -- Fully reproducible
>>
>>
>> I'm not a theoretician (so please correct me if I'm wrong), but isn't this
>> *not* predicted by the W-L theory?
>>
>> Cheers,
>> S.A.
>>
>

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