it is highly preferable to use deuterium, as opposed to hydrogen.

I disagree.

Deuterium has a non zero spin whereas hydrogen has a zero spin which is
required in low powered LENR reactions.

On Sat, Oct 18, 2014 at 9:34 AM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:

> Bob,
> I have cherry-picked three major “spin facts” from this compendium which
> indicate that if one wants to apply a nano-magnetism or spin-coupling
> modality to LENR, it is highly preferable to use deuterium, as opposed to
> hydrogen. That may be why Mizuno chose the deuterium-nickel combination.
> All
> eyes will be shifting to Mizuno in less than three weeks.
>
> From: Bob Cook
> [snip] The deuteron, being an isospin singlet, is antisymmetric under
> nucleon exchange due to isospin, and therefore must be symmetric under the
> double exchange of their spin and location. Therefore it can be in either
> of
> the following two different states: Symmetric spin and symmetric under
> parity. In this case, the exchange of the two nucleons will multiply the
> deuterium wavefunction by (-1) from isospin exchange, (+1) from spin
> exchange and (+1) from parity (location exchange), for a total of (-1) as
> needed for antisymmetry…. In this case, the exchange of the two nucleons
> will multiply the deuterium wavefunction by (-1) from isospin exchange,
> (-1)
> from spin exchange and (-1) from parity (location exchange), again for a
> total of (-1) as needed for antisymmetry. [snip]
>
> …suggesting that there may be a way to stimulate the D via an electric
> quadrupole input signal.   Also with a magnetic moment the D must respond
> to
> a magnetic field and fine tuning of an oscillating magnetic field may very
> well excite the D to flip up and down in the field.  The composite
> particles
> of the D should have slightly different magnetic moments that can respond
> and create an "excited" state IMHO on a transient short lived time frame.
> However in a coherent system such a transient may be enough to cause other
> transitions of similar energy states to occur with mass energy being
> changed
> to angular momentum energy.
>
> The quadrupole input is a strong clue.
>
>
>

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