Since the subject has arisen, it is worth mentioning that the
spontaneous generation of matter happens in "steady-state"
cosmological theories propounded by Fred Hoyle and others.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steady_State_theory

Harry

On Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 9:56 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: MarkI-ZeroPoint
>
> 1. If a neutron can disappear into the vacuum, then:
>        1a. Can a neutron pop INTO this space (spontaneous formation)?
>
> Let me just say this. There have been for a long time - reports of 
> spontaneous (anomalous) hydrogen showing up in extreme vacuum conditions. 
> Hydrogen from nowhere, essentially. But that phenomenon, if true, has morphed 
> into fringe religious bogosity so one hesitates to even mention it. There was 
> an article in IE and it has been picked up here, for what it is worth:
>
> http://blog.hasslberger.com/2006/06/hydrogen_from_space_the_aether.html
>
> This is not the same as neutrons from nowhere, except that the neutron has 
> only a short half-life, and you expect to see hydrogen in the end. Does that 
> account for the hydrogen phenomenon, and if so, where is the decay energy? 
> Does trans-dimensional transfer happen isothermally, regardless? (at least 
> from the perspective of the host)
>
> That would be the only way it could happen.
>
> Jones

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