On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 3:16 PM, Stefan Israelsson Tampe
<stefan.ita...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Why can't the peak be at 100eV or 10eV and many order of magnitude more
> intense.

Yes.

>There is not much in the shown signal
> that indicates a peak in teh extreme spectra near the seen peak in the
> background. I think it looks like a 1/X^n curve that continues
> way below the cutof of the instrument. The seen peak in the extreme spectra
> is way to strange to be a normal peak, clearly an artefact of the
> filtering of the instrument. So, if this is not an artefact, what we are
> seeing can very well be something that is rare and the bulk of the
> show is perhaps a result of much lower energetic electrons if we assume that
> the brehmstrahlung is from a distribution of electrons with different
> speeds. This does however indicate unexplained high energy releases and is a
> clear signal of nuclear origin as stated.

I think the entire spectrum is produced by nuclei.
Harry

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