You are saying Schrödinger's cat can also change color?

On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 12:26 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

>  Another wild thought on nuclear “faux-transmutation.”
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> If a DDL can displace an inner electron of some elements (K or L shell)
> then the resultant species will possibly react chemically as if it was the
> next element to the right in the periodic table, even if there has been no
> “real” nuclear transmutation. There could be differences, but basically if
> nickel were to bind with a DDL in an inner orbital, then the resultant
> species NiH* (where H* is a DDL) would look like copper.
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> Perhaps it would not look exactly like copper but it could be similar
> enough to fool many instruments and possibly would be copper-colored
> instead of silvery. The H* could possibly displace one electron’s average
> position in a p-orbital of an L shell and be held there magnetically. What
> are the objections to that ? (other than that it is shockingly at odds with
> the mainstream).
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> …And lest we forget the amazing claims of Louis Kervran in biological
> transmutation, it should be noted that CaCO3 (as a transmutation product
> for chicken eggs) has a notable signature in its *3.7 keV* fluorescent
> X-ray line.
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> The latter is possibly unrelated… if one believes in truly random
> coincidences.
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> If it is not coincidental, then the DDL slant on this reaction (which
> basic reaction was verified by several groups) is that poultry Hens which
> are calcium deprived, as in the experiments, but had lots of potassium in
> their diets – were able to make the normal number of eggs by converting
> potassium-39 into calcium-40. This could arguably happen by a biological
> mechanism which first created a DDL.
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> Then this DDL either fused with the K ++OR++ was merely chemically bound
> displacing an inner electron, so that it reacted chemically like calcium to
> form eggs shells. IOW there was no nuclear reaction, but the KH*CO3 acts
> exactly as if it was CaCO3 (where H* is DDL). The same spectral line from
> calcium even shows up from the substitute, which makes detection more
> difficult.
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> Bizarre. This is not the kind of evidence which anyone would want to use
> in support of the DDL however. (unless the audience is vortex)
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> Jones
>

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