On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 7:26 AM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

>
> Since there is zero evidence of high energy gammas in Ni-H reaction, and
> zero evidence of radioactivity in the ash - and only slight evidence of
> soft
> spectrum radiation,


Tritium is radioactive, so the evidence of radioactivity in the ash of the
Ni-H reaction is nonzero.

D2 + H2 gas, Fe-Cr + Ni-Ti substrate:  10^11 atoms tritium.  Romodanov et
al., "Nuclear reactions in condensed media and X-ray," Seventh
International Conference on Cold Fusion, 1998.

Ni + H2 gas:  tritium at 7.7 * 10^2 times background.  Sankaranarayanan et
al., "Evidence for tritium generation in self-heated nickel wires subjected
to hydrogen gas absorption/desorption cycles," Fifth International
Conference on Cold Fusion, 1995; "Investigation of low level tritium
generation in Ni-H2O electrolytic cells, "Fourth International Conference
on Cold Fusion," 1993.

Eric

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