In reply to  Jones Beene's message of Sat, 19 May 2012 06:54:33 -0700:
Hi Jones,
[snip]
>In a hybrid Millsean understanding, gammas and especially soft x-rays in the
>range of several hundred eV up to 10s of keV range are expected. Hard gammas
>are not expected. These softer gammas happen on the statistical end
>(Boltzmann’s tail) of ground state redundancy. They represent a small
>proportion of net energy. Hydrogen past a certain level of redundancy can
>continue to reduce its effective diameter to a much lower geometry
>auto-catalytically, if it is not sequestered. 
>
>The gammas seen will typically account for a few percent of the net energy –
>and are evidence of run-away hydrogen redundancy. Most of the excess energy
>– upwards to 99% of the net energy of the process, is derived from UV and
>EUV as Mills proposes; and the few gammas seen are an unwanted side effect.
>The reason that only a small percentage of ‘shrunken’ hydrogen goes this
>route is simple. As its radius shrinks, hydrogen develops extremely high
>magnetic susceptibility, and in the presence of ferromagnetic electrodes (or
>even paramagnetic) the species becomes sequestered within the inner
>orbitals, and can no longer absorb EUV radiation to further shrink. Even
>paramagnetic electrodes will inhibit runaway.

You can't have it both ways. ;)

Either shrinking releases energy or it consumes energy. If it "can no longer
absorb EUV radiation to further shrink" then it consumes energy. 

If 
"Most of the excess energy – upwards to 99% of the net energy of the process, is
derived from UV and EUV as Mills proposes; and the few gammas seen are an
unwanted side effect." ... then it releases energy.

BTW gammas from this process are *extremely* unlikely as that would require an
"m" value of about 100. Even then the energy can't exceed 255 keV. Furthermore
since the origin would be the shrinking electron, they are more properly
classified as x-rays. A far more likely source of true gammas is the occasional
actual fusion reaction, or it's also possible that the "gammas" are in fact
energetic bremsstrahlung resulting from an IC fusion reaction.
Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html

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