Invoking a nebulous QM effect to explain a macro phenomenon is not really useful.
All I see here is that you have proposed an imaginary explanation with little relevance to large scale activity in the real-world. Feynman would balk at this mis-interpretation of his ideas. If there is to be elemental "transmutation" of non-fissile elements, which is normally extremely energetic, then there must be a real and testable underlying nuclear reaction and real data, but here with K and Na, none is proposed nor even imaginable. However... In the case of potassium transmuting into calcium (Kervran effect), which stands in stark contrast to the situation with sodium, there is actually presented a real-world underlying nuclear reaction of lower energy, and with tons of real world evidence - with which to support the surprising claim. But with vastly different atomic weights such as between sodium and potassium, there is no credible expectation of transmutation, and ... in the end... contamination is the most likely explanation. ------ Axil Axil wrote: See my post above on this thread at | | Jun 12, 2021, 12:04 AM (5 days ago) | Transmutation never produces any particles, radiation or energy is not knowable because of quantum mechanical superposition and Feynman's Infinite Quantum Paths theory. The state of superposition is only completed until the transmutation has long been completed..for theory details seehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSFRN-ymfgE On Thu, Jun 17, 2021 at 6:20 PM Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote: Axil, Wouldn't that kind of transmutation involve releasing two alphas from the K nucleus ? AFAIK that would be unknown to physics ... or what kind or reaction are you suggesting? Axil Axil wrote: The sodium lines seen in the grape microwave experiment may have come from transmutation of potassium into sodium, Grapes don't contain much sodium: 2mg vs, 176mg per cup