On Thu, Apr 25, 2013 at 6:54 PM, Harry Veeder <hveeder...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Possible laboratory evidence of diprotons
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diproton#Helium-2_.28diproton.29
>
> It is interesting that one of the experiments mentioned in the above
> link used fluorine and a recent post on Passerini's blog suggests
> SPAWAR would have got better results with fluorine  instead of
> chlorine.
>
> Harry
>

After doing some more googling and browsing on the internet it seems
opinions vary on the existence of diprotons  (a helium nucleus with
just two protons). Hans Bethe seminal 1938 paper on stellar
nuclueosynethesis http://hepd.pnpi.spb.ru/ofve/nni/PhysRev55434.pdf
doesn't mention diprotons, but over the years there seems to be
growing interest in diprotons at the theoretical level. This has to be
important in the study LENR/CF too. If diprotons were made in the
experiment discussed below, then perhaps diprotons are made in D-Pd
and H-Ni systems too.

http://www.aip.org/pnu/2008/split/865-2.html


New Form of Artificial Radioactivity

The basic structure of matter has been known for almost a century, and
yet scientists keep learning new things by persistently poking and
ripping apart atoms. An atom consists of a relatively heavy part at
the core, the nucleus, and a lighter part, a fleet of electrons,
orbiting the nucleus. The electron part determines all the important
chemical, electrical, and optical properties of the atom, but the
nucleus is important too. It contains most of the atom’s mass and
energy, and the reactions among nuclei are responsible for powering
the sun.

Nature often plays tricks. Usually hydrogen atoms have a nucleus with
a lone proton, but sometimes that nucleus can possess a neutron in
addition. This version, or isotope, of hydrogen is called H-2 since it
has two nuclear units. Still another version of hydrogen, H-3, has a
nucleus consisting of one proton and two neutrons. Similarly, the main
form of helium, He-4, has four nuclear particles, but can also get by
with only three: the He-3 isotope consists of two protons and one
neutron. All the other elements also have numerous isotopes, some of
which are stable, which means they can persist for millions of years,
and some are unstable, which means that they break apart after a
certain typical period called a half-life.

Radioactivity is the process by which unstable nuclei transform into
more stable nuclei. “Radio” refers not to the kind of radio waves we
get from a station but to the castoffs---either in the form of
particles or electromagnetic waves---radiated by the parent nucleus.
Historically the main forms of radioactivity were identified as alpha,
beta, and gamma rays (these being the first three letters of the Greek
alphabet). An alpha ray or alpha particle is none other than a He-4
nucleus. Beta rays are now known to be electrons. And gamma rays are
really just high-energy waves, even more potent than x rays.

The new kind of radioactivity, discovered in an experiment conducted
recently at the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, a nuclear
laboratory in Italy, consists of nuclear fragments made of two
protons. You can think of this as a new isotope of helium. He-2, as it
would be called, is highly unstable and very quickly flies apart.
Making the unexpected new nuclear species took some ingenuity. First a
beam of neon-20 ions was crashed into a foil of beryllium. In this
collision some of the neon nuclei suffered a slight robbery: losing
two neutons they ended up as neon18 nuclei. Next, these same flying
nuclei encountered a foil of lead. This second collision had the
effect of exciting the Ne-18 nucleus into a highly unstable condition.
The remedy for this instability was for the Ne-18 nucleus to slough
off a fragment. There are several ways of doing this. Among the decay
options, the Italian physicists found, was a rare,
never-before-demonstrated process in which the Ne-18 nucleus turned
itself into an oxygen-16 nucleus, plus that He-2 fragment.

According to one of the researchers, Giovanni Raciti at the LNS-INFN
lab (rac...@lns.infn.it), the two-proton decay mode was predicted
about 50 years ago. A few experiments conducted before this showed
ambiguous evidence: two protons emerged from the decay but one
couldn’t tell that the protons had not been thrown out one at a time
or both at the same time randomly from the whole Ne-18 or from a
single lump.The new experiment definitely shows that the two protons
come out together from the breakup of a He-2 cluster (see figure at
http://www.aip.org/png/2008/302.htm). The new form of helium isn’t
good for anything practical since it doesn’t survive even for a
billionth of a second. Raciti believes, however, that the observation
of this slender isotope of helium will us understand how are built
very unstable nuclei with a number of protons exceeding the one of
neutrons and, conversely, how heavy nuclei---the cores of the heavier
atoms here on earth---are built up in the interiors of stars.
(Physical Review Letters, 16 May 2008)

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