Thanks Axil, Edmund. That helps understanding. I urgently need to study
some basic quantum mechanics.
>>
>>
>
>
Teslaalset, you asked a simple and reasonable question and you deserve
an understandable answer.
The reaction being claimed is Ni + p = Cu with a proton being added to
a Nickel isotope that results in the isotope of copper having the same
number of neutrons. Ni + p has greater mass than do
We can assume that there is a significant amount of randomness in the LENR
process that disrupts the nucleus. Another factor that adds to the
unpredictability of the transmutation results is the added elements other
than nickel in the reactor chamber that find their way into the reaction
zone.
D
If we assume mass is converted into energy, heat in this case, then why
would transmutations go in the directions of increased mass?
If Rossi is indicating Copper and Ni62 are key ingrediences, would Copper
not be the starting point of creating Ni62 from Copper isotopic
transmutations, or the litt
If there is substantial support on this approach we finally have a beter
name for this technology : "FIT", Forced Isotopic Transmutation" ;)
Op zaterdag 10 augustus 2013 schreef Teslaalset (robbiehobbiesh...@gmail.com
):
> IInteresting analysis of LENR experiments by Norman D. Cook and Valerio
>
gt; per Isotope, as they want, to fit the arbitrary 86.13%. Or is it something
> that is not well explained that enlighten the whole thing?
>
> ** **
> --
>
> *From:* Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com]
> *Sent:* samedi 10 août 2013 23:17
> *To
thing
> that is not well explained that enlighten the whole thing?
>
> ** **
> --
>
> *From:* Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com]
> *Sent:* samedi 10 août 2013 23:17
> *To:* vortex-l
> *Subject:* Re: [Vo]:Norman D. Cook @ ICCF18: Isotope s
something that is not
well explained that enlighten the whole thing?
_
From: Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com]
Sent: samedi 10 août 2013 23:17
To: vortex-l
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Norman D. Cook @ ICCF18: Isotope shifts in LENR
I dont understand how the depletion mechanism works
"If a reaction runs long enough, you would expect the 3He or 4He capture to
pile on -- to see increases of 2*3He or 3*3He, for example, in the Ni/H
system."
Expect a single and double 3He and single and double 4He decays to form
lithium, boron, and beryllium.
On Sat, Aug 10, 2013 at 5:16 PM, Eri
On Sat, Aug 10, 2013 at 9:37 AM, Teslaalset wrote:
IInteresting analysis of LENR experiments by Norman D. Cook and Valerio
> Dallacasa, presented at ICCF 18. Shifts in isotopic percentages in LENR
> 'fuels'.
> It has some interesting hooks with Rossi's claim on Ni62 being essencial
> and Defkalion
*I don’t understand how the depletion mechanism works.*
Fission preferentially occurs in one isotope over the others. This isotope
is depleted in relation to the others.
For example, Ni58 undergoes fission more often than do NI60, Ni61, Ni62,
and Ni64.
In slide titled "Nickel Transmutation SUS30
Andrea Rossi is a fan of Dan Cook and recommends his book:
http://www.amazon.com/Models-Atomic-Nucleus-Unification-Nucleons/dp/3642147364(~$70)
And Don Wicher writes at https://www.facebook.com/groups/ECat.LENR/ :
Quote:
In addition to his book which Rossi thinks so highly of Norman Cook is a
ve
Ive read the slides. I dont understand how the depletion mechanism works.
In other words, what makes this theory valuable? Everyone could give the
depletion rate for each isotope that matches the experimental values. There
is no discovery here. So there is something Ive not understood.
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