Still above my paygrade.  I don't see Muons mentioned.  They're implied.  I
get it.  Abstract, like an artist.


On Tue, Aug 19, 2014 at 10:54 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

> DGT says that about 1 tesla is produced at 20 CMs in their reactor. If the
> source of that field is localized to a few nanometers, that means that by
> the inverse square law or the cube law if you like, the power at a few
> nanometers is 20,000,000 to the second or third power tesla. Now that is a
> strong magnetic field.
>
>
> On Wed, Aug 20, 2014 at 1:35 AM, Kevin O'Malley <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Thanks Axil.  Cool Explanation.  Unfortunately, about par for the course
>> in your theorizings.... I cannot understand it.  I do not see a single
>> reference to muons nor how much power is required for them to do their
>> thing.  Perhaps it is implied... heavily implied.   This isn't a
>> "connecting of the dots", it is a "drawing a detailed picture with dots
>> that artists think EVERYONE should be able to see".  But not everyone sees
>> it, and the more abstract the dot construction, the fewer people who see
>> it.   Once you get to a certain level of abstraction, anonymous email
>> experts use their puppets to try to get you kicked off the board because
>> even those anonymous "famous" experts probably don't understand what you're
>> saying and they're too intimidated to confront you.  Well, anyways, thanks
>> for the response.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Aug 19, 2014 at 10:07 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> The SPP's not only focus magnetic photons, it also focuses virtual
>>> photons.
>>>
>>> Virtual photons create the magnetic field that define the rate of
>>> nuclear decay. Usually, the vacuum produces a fixed average rate of virtual
>>> photon production. So the rate of radioactive decay is stable.
>>>
>>> When the SPP focuses virtual photons into a small volume, the rate of
>>> radioactive decay increases a lot.
>>>
>>> This answers why there is no radioactive byproducts produced in LENR.
>>>
>>> The Rate of photon production is increased in the same way through
>>> focusing, so the chance that a meson is produced by magnetic interaction
>>> with the proton goes up a lot. The two photon reactions both real and
>>> virtual are directly proportional.
>>>
>>> So if radioactive half-life in reduced though virtual particle
>>> production, the rate(probability) of meson production is  increased
>>> proportionally as demonstrated by the same concurrent photon focusing
>>> mechanism.
>>>
>>> There is always a chance that a meson is created from the vacuum.
>>>
>>> Magnetic focusing also increases the  chance of seeing a whopper of a
>>> virtual energy increase in the proton so meson production goes way up
>>> too. This increased chance of a large virtual energy contribution per unit
>>> time also increases the chances for meson creation.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>

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