Has anyone described the necessary chain of stellar events that would produce 
the present isotopic abundance of copper and is there proof that all those 
events actually happened?

My point is perhaps some elements/isotopes are formed naturally by a LENR 
process rather than by a succession 
of stellar events. Therefore the reason why the isotopic abundance produced by 
the rossi reactor is natural is because the rossi reactor emulates how nature 
does it.

Harry

----- Original Message ----
> From: Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net>
> To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
> Sent: Fri, April 15, 2011 8:43:40 PM
> Subject: RE: [Vo]:About isotopic ratio on spent fuel (E-Cat)
> 
> Our sun is a second (or third) generation star. The previous supernova which
> created all of the elements and isotope balances that are found on earth,
> are the products of a certain starting mass, age, temperature, and other
> variables that existed billions of years ago. These influenced that prior
> Nova, and determined precisely what we see today as unique isotope ratios in
> our (local) system among trillions of other unique systems. All of them are
> different locally.
> 
> However, physical nuclear reactions are supposed to be universal, not local.
> 
> 
> For a universal reaction to reproduce the exact same ratio as found in a 10
> billion year old nova/supernova, one of trillions ... well, the odds of that
> happening are ... shall we say - astronomical?
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Harry Veeder 
> 
> Mattia Rizzi wrote:
>  
> >A nuclear reaction should produce non-natural distributions.
> 
> but how did the natural distributions arise in the first place?
> 
> Harry
> 
> 
> 
>

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