Steve--

Gluons would mediated the force holding neutrons together. They do it for protons and neutrons in a nucleus. Is there a good model of the gluon wave function and what its dimensional influence might be? A neutron is a Fermi particle I think. The group of neutrons could be no more than a BEC of pairs of neutrons, maybe Cooper pairs coupled with spins in opposite directions. There would have to be an even number of neutrons in any group, however. Thus, 2 neutrons would have to react at once if any new particle or particles are formed. If deuterons were also in the BEC as Kim postulates would be possible (deuterons and paired neutrons are both Bose particles or Bose quasi-particles.)

Was there radiation emitted in Fisher model?

Bob
----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve High" <diamondweb...@gmail.com>
To: "Vortex" <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 23, 2014 9:38 AM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:MIT Sunday Morning


John C Fisher. Undergraduate at MIT in the forties!!! He says he's he solved the LENR quandary with polyneutron theory. A clump of naked neutrons sitting in lattice. Absorbs deuterium atoms and spits out hydrogen atoms plus energy. (Then the hydrogen atoms recombine to hydrogen molecules) A real outlier model but it would correlate Mizuno's news of yesterday that the final gas product from his reactor has an atomic number of two which would likely be hydrogen molecules. Audience respectful of an impressively sharp performance from a man who has to be in his mid nineties. The audience objects that the binding force that would hold a polyneutron together is unknown. Fisher points out that the binding force that holds a deuteron together is unknown.

Steve High

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