I lost that data in my memory indeed. Thanks for refreshing it. Do you have a public reference on fusion of odd count nuleons not fusing? I respect your knowledge but like to understand this a bit better.
It looks like there are many variaties possible. Looks like much is depending on what type/size of NAE occurs locally. On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 4:53 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote: > You should take a look at the table 2 and table 3 element list from the > DGT ICCF-17 document. > > > http://cdn.coldfusionnow.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/2012-08-13-ICCF-17__Paper_DGTGx.pdf > > The is a large increase in very light elements and not much nickel to > copper transmutation. > > This means that Cluster fusion of many nuclei including many protons and a > heavy metal nucleus is occurring per fusion event. > > In the Rossi ash, iron was 10% of the element assay. > > *1H+1H+62Ni => 4He + 4He + 56Fe + 3.495 MeV <==== this one produces iron.* > > Fusion cannot happen if the nucleon count is odd, e.g. Ni61. This > indicates photofusion. > > Gamma Radiation is converted to huge magnetic fields and will result in > EUV radiation from the eventual destruction of the EMF soliton that will be > thermalized by election capture. > > >

