The 3.6 keV x-ray photons are easily detected with an x-ray spectrometer such as the Amptek X-123SDD at http://www.amptek.com/products/x-123sdd-complete-x-ray-spectrometer-with-silicon-drift-detector-sdd/ . See their chart at this URL for the different window options that will easily allow detection down to 1 keV: http://www.amptek.com/products/c-series-low-energy-x-ray-windows/ . I am hoping to get one of these some day.
The bigger issue is that not much will make it out of the hotCat even if that is the primary channel for conveying the heat. In the case of RF, I would expect almost none to escape the hotCat because the reaction is in a Faraday cage. The RF that could penetrate would have to be below 1 kHz. Bob Higgins On Thu, Oct 2, 2014 at 1:44 PM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hoped for prediction – but unlikely due to technical limitations: evidence > of the signature x-ray indicative of DDL/dark matter, in the range of 3.6 > keV. > > > > Since there is no commercial meter for this spectrum, the x-ray would have > to show up in some other clever way, such as film exposure – thus it is > unlikely. > > > > Jones > > > > > > >

