The other option that looks promising is for an entangled effect involving many 
protons.  These couplings are instantaneous according to what I have seen, in 
which case the exact distance to a brother is not quite as important.


Dave



-----Original Message-----
From: Eric Walker <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, Jun 23, 2013 3:26 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi and DGT Similarity?


On Sat, Jun 22, 2013 at 10:45 PM,  <[email protected]> wrote:



Typical separation distances within a lattice are on the order of 1 Angstrom. It
takes light 3E-19 seconds to travel this distance.
Typical nuclear reaction times are order 1E-23 seconds. I.e. 30000 times faster.
In short, long before another atom at normal distances could help out (or even
knew his brother was in trouble), either T or 3He would have been the result of
D-D fusion.



Very interesting.  Maimon proposes that the two d's encounter one another at 
100 fermis (0.001 angstroms) from the palladium nucleus.  Something tells me 
that is not close enough given this ratio; perhaps there's a sufficient spread 
in the probability distribution of the reaction times to make fusion 
non-negligible?


Eric





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