It is not clear how much magnetic energy is required to keep a LENR good
reaction going. The number of muon reactions that occur is proportional to
its decay time. A muon that has a long delay time because of the amount
of it kinetic energy content may catalyze many thousands of fusion
reactions on the average instead of just 150.

A real muon may hang around for so long that it may produce a fusion
explosion.


On Sun, Aug 10, 2014 at 5:01 PM, Eric Walker <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sun, Aug 10, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Once the energy level of the magnetic field get up 140 MeV( the mass of
>> the Meson) the meson is no longer virtual and will not decay.
>>
>> Less than 140 MeV, based on the energy/time uncertainty principle, the
>> decay time of the virtual meson is proportional to the kinetic energy
>> content of the mesons pass.
>>
>
> What I'm hinting at is that it might be a little hard to apply an external
> magnetic field to increase the ground state of a proton by ~ 140 MeV.  :)
>
> Eric
>
>

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