What about other elements than tritium? Tritium is a consequence of the
decay of Lithium and Berilium formed by the successive stages of deuterium
fusion or hydrogen, for example. I am thinking more about heavier elements,
that should be formed by transmutation of the containing lattice.

2011/11/14 Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com>

> See
> Reports of tritium production from Rossi-like experiments
>
> Jones Beene
> http://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l@eskimo.com/msg49057.html
>
> On Sun, Nov 13, 2011 at 11:10 PM, Daniel Rocha <danieldi...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Oh! Nice! Would you mind showing a paper with such transmutation? Perhaps
>> an example in each order of magnitude in the interval.
>>
>>
>> 2011/11/14 Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net>
>>
>>>  *From:* Daniel Rocha ****
>>>
>>> ** **
>>>
>>> **Ø  **Before seeing it, I am referring to transmutations of cold
>>> fusion. I wonder why such isotopes haven't been seen, as far as I could
>>> search  the literature. ****
>>>
>>> ** **
>>>
>>> Not sure what you are referring to, but there are many isotopes in that
>>> stability range – notably radium 226 (1,600 years half-life) which was
>>> commercially important many years ago for clock and watch dials.****
>>>
>>> ** **
>>>
>>
>>
>

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