One other exotic possibility comes to mind, thinking about Ni-64. This
nickel isotope appears to be unique in the periodic table, being the highest
ratio of excess neutrons in a stable isotope, compared to the most common
isotope of that element (36/30 = 12%) in nature. (hydrogen-deuterium does
not qualify since H has no neutron)

Not sure what that means, but when one finds an anomaly juxtaposed with a
singularity - the two are unlikely to be the result of coincidence. There is
not much of this isotope available ... OTOH there is more of it than there
is U235 in natural U.
                _____________________________________________
                
                Yes - even if plausible way exists in QM for converting
deuterium to hydrogen with gain, that gain obviously does not derive from
the mass of the deuterium, per se. 

                This leaves these main possibilities, and a few others

                1) vacuum energy (ZPE)
                2) nickel mass via spin coupling 
                3) Mills version of redundant ground states

                It could be possible that all of these are entwined. 


                -----Original Message-----
                From: Terry Blanton 

                Axil wrote: They say that the data never lies; but wow, does
LENR really get all or most of its energy from the vacuum?

                > I have always thought so.  But, then, I have been a
Puthoff fan-boy for ages.  :-)

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