At 05:04 PM 10/11/2012, ChemE Stewart wrote:
Abd,
When a neutrino collides with a hydrogen proton you get a triple
track. See photo on wilkipedia from 1970.
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino
It might produce a triple track with some detectors. That's a bubble
chamber. CR-39 and LR-115 don't produce tracks from all charged
particles at all ranges of energy. I wish I knew more about it. I
don't have access to all the literature that exists on CR-39, lots of
it is behind pay walls.
In addition, neutrinos only very rarely interact in the way shown.
Cold fusion is the production of neutrinos, which are also
considered a dark matter candidate. They are colliding with
Hydrogen and also triggering beta decays. That is what they do.
No evidence has been shown of neutrino activity from cold fusion.
Maybe. However, the quantity would have to be very large to be
detectable. Neutrino emission might be shown from missing energy, but
we don't yet have sufficiently accurate measurements of reaction
energy, my guess.
If W-L theory is correct, there would indeed be neutrinos. Still not
enough to be detected, I suspect.