Eric - By now you fully appreciate the impossibility of reconciling
mainstream fusion details with LENR. There is little way to rationalize all
of the contradictions, based on the data now available… but that does not
keep us from trying.

Let me add this, which would clear up some of the contradiction, if it were
true. You state: 

For example, in dd fusion, the short-lived compound nucleus [dd]* is not an
isomer of 4He because it decays quite rapidly in one of three ways -- to
p+t, n+3He and 4He+ɣ.  

If Mizuno is correct we could add a fourth pathway for the dd reaction in
LENR. That would be p+p+p+p. It is not clear if this reaction should be
called fusion or fission or a new form of IC :-) but as of July 2014, it
looms as the most important unexplained experiment on the horizon for
deuterium-based LENR. 

But then again we must ask, can these results be applied to retrospectively
explain experiments going back 25 years? …those who have followed the field
for so long would complain: “what about all the reports of 4He correlating
to excess heat ?”

The answer to that would be something like this. Deuterium, in condensed
matter will often form into a stable Cooper pair of deuterons (or dense
deuterium), which is stable enough to pass through a spectrometer and fool
the experimenter into the belief that the species is 4He. Either way, some
form of dense paired deuterium happens often enough to explain the tiny
amount of 4He which seems to have been documented in the past. 

>From there on, we must explain why this so-called “4He” or mass-4 signal on
a mass spectrometer is some other species instead of helium. That is far
easier than to rationalize the lack of 24 MeV gammas.

Here is a paper of interest from Winterberg, but it does not go far enough:
http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0912/0912.5414.pdf

The basic concept is that a paired species of deuterons can form and linger
in condensed matter for weeks, but actual decay can occur after a delay.
When decay occurs, only protons remain plus excess energy which is below
gamma intensity but much more than chemical. Thus we explain all the main
details of “helium LENR” but without helium.
1)      Excess heat
2)      Lack of gamma radiation
3)      What “appears to be” 4He on a mass-spec, but is not
4)      The so-called “heat after death” phenomenon… 
                
                Of course, this explanation raises as many questions as it
answers, and leaves open the door that a small percentage of reactions still
must proceed to tritium, since tritium is documented; but anything that
removes the 24MeV millstone from the shoulders of LENR should be given full
consideration.

                From: Eric Walker 

                I'm in the process of trying to better understand internal
conversion and it's cross section vis-a-vis inner shell electrons and
sources of charge in the far field.  I'm hoping someone (Robin?) can help me
to get the terminology right and point me to further reading.
                
                Here is my understanding so far.  Internal conversion is a
process in which an inner shell electron is expelled from an atom as the
result of a nuclear transition.  It is mediated by the electromagnetic force
(in contrast to the weak or strong interactions) and results from
electromagnetic coupling between the electron and an excited nucleus.  The
kind of nuclear transition that leads to internal conversion is generally an
isomeric transition; i.e., the deexcitation of a metastable isomer to a
lower energy level.  Internal conversion competes with gamma emission, and
there is an internal conversion coefficient, which for a competing pair of
branches, one IC and the other gamma photon emitting, gives you the ratio of
internal conversion electrons to photons.  In some cases the internal
conversion coefficient can be quite high, meaning that IC is greatly favored
over gamma photon emission.  There are a number of factors that are thought
to go into a high IC coefficient -- when the energy of the transition is
small, when the nucleus is large, and when the daughter nucleus has zero
spin, for example.  Unlike in the case of beta emission, the energies for
internal conversion electrons are not broadband and show up in line spectra
as sharp peaks.  This is because unlike in the case of beta decay there is
no neutrino to take part of the energy of the decay away from the emitted
electron.
                
                Here's where my understanding starts to get fuzzy.  The
above description talked about isomeric transitions, which involve the decay
of a metastable isomer to the ground state of the isotope.  Metastable
isomers are long-lived excited states of nuclei, ones that have significant
half-lives.  Similar, shorter-lived nuclei are not considered metastable and
are instead referred to as compound nuclei.  For example, in dd fusion, the
short-lived compound nucleus [dd]* is not an isomer of 4He because it decays
quite rapidly in one of three ways -- to p+t, n+3He and 4He+ɣ.  (The 4He+ɣ
branch is orders of magnitude less likely than the p+t and n+3He branches,
whose likelihoods are roughly split 50-50.)  I understand from reading
around that the emission of a gamma photon during the deexcitation of a
metastable isomer can be on the order of 10E-9 seconds, and that the time
required for the emission is something that depends upon the spin of the
excited nucleus.  Excited nuclei with certain spins will take significantly
longer to emit a gamma photon than nuclei with other spins.  Am I correct in
thinking that the same principles apply to a compound nucleus such as [dd]*?
I.e., in the gamma photon branch, the [dd]* de-excitation is on the order of
10E-9 seconds, or perhaps longer?  Also, I haven't found a reference that
gives the approximate times needed for the other branches (p+t and n+3He),
in which the compound nucleus splits up into fragments.
                
                Returning to internal conversion, one explanation for it
focuses on the fact that inner shell electrons have a high probability of
passing through the nucleus.  The idea is that during the time that the
electron is within the nucleus there is a nontrivial probability that it
will interact with the excited state, which, if this happens, will result in
the energy of the excited state being passed on to the electron.  The
implication is that the less likely an electron is to be found within the
nucleus, the less likely that the electron will be ejected as a result of
internal conversion.  So the probability of IC is highest with K-shell
electrons and decreases the further you go out.  One question I have about
this explanation is that IC is mediated via the electromagnetic interaction;
my understanding of this is that there is a virtual photon that passes from
the nucleus to the electron.  I do not see why the electron would
particularly need to be passing through the nucleus for such a virtual
photon to reach it, for the electromagnetic interaction is long-range.
Anywhere a virtual photon can reach, it seems, there would be a nontrivial
probability for an internal conversion decay to occur.  Another challenge I
have with this explanation is that I think the de Broglie wavelength of an
orbital electron is going to be far larger than the nucleus or any than
particular nucleon; my understanding is that this is a problem because the
de Broglie wavelengths have to be roughly comparable for an interaction of
some kind to be probable.
                
                One question I have has to do with the energy of the virtual
photon.  Internal conversion is less likely, other things being equal, if
the energy of the transition is large (e.g., on the order of MeVs).  Not
having read this detail, I would have thought that the energy of the decay
would factor into the distance at which the electron would need to be in
order for an interaction to be likely.  At low energies (in the keV), the
electron would need to be nearby, and at higher energies (MeV), the electron
would need to be further away.  What details of the underlying mechanics am
I missing in thinking this?
                
                Eric
                

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