Ed published this description of the paper at CMNS:

I'm making a prepublication copy of a new paper available for your
information and comment - sort of a universal peer review.(
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/StormsEnatureofen.pdf) It has been submitted
to JCMNS. Unfortunately it is too big for Google to accept. Consequently,
you have to go to LENR.org to download it. the paper is "Nature of
energetic radiation emitted from a metal exposed to H2" by Storms and
Scanlan. Perhaps other people can be encouraged to use this approach when
they submit papers for publication.

This is an important paper because it uses radiation measurements to
identify when LENR occurs rather than energy production. Because such
radiation can only result from a nuclear reaction and its measurement can
detect a nuclear reaction at a much lower rate than is possible by
measuring energy production, radiation provides an excellent tool for
studying the LENR process.  Of course, heat is being produced but a much
larger sample would be required for its detection.

The LENR process was initiated using a method based on the theory that I
published recently. This is the first example of using a theory to produce
a predicted result using a predicted method.  We found that when several
materials are subjected to conditions expected and found to produce voids,
and then exposed to H2, a source of radiation results that is consistent
with the radiation reported by previous workers. In addition, this
radiation has strange effects on other materials, which is a new discovery.

We are making these results available at an early stage in our studies to
alert people to the possible benefit of observing radiation. I expect many
questions and objections will result.  Nevertheless, people need to be
encouraged to duplicate the work to determine if it is correct or not.

I'm in the process of determining the exact treatment required to make the
effect occur every time.  Although I produced 4 samples that work, many did
not. I now know the reason.  This method is ok  as a way to study the
effect but it is not useful to scale up to produce a commercial source of
energy. However, it gives support to my theory and provides a good method
to demonstrate LENR. The nature of the radiation also provides useful
insight into the mechanism.

Your comments would be welcome.

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