When heat is produced, so are transmuted elements. f/h creation would not produce transmuted elements.
On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 12:01 AM, <[email protected]> wrote: > In reply to Axil Axil's message of Tue, 26 Jun 2012 04:07:03 -0400: > Hi, > [snip] > >In the Rossi reaction, the lack of radioactive unstable nuclei tells me > >that the proton has little or no kinetic energy when it enters a nickel > >nucleus. This implies that the coulomb barrier has been removed long > before > >the penetration of the nucleus by the proton. > > Gentle motion isn't enough to preclude gamma radiation. The very entry of > the > proton releases at least 6 MeV, ample to result in gamma emission from an > excited nucleus. The only examples of relatively low gamma emission that > are > seen in other reactions are when the energy is removed by a fast particle > before > gamma emission can take place. This seems to me like the most likely path > in > this case too, since it involves no new physics, and some low energy > radiation > has been reported. > > I suspect that the primary reason that Rossi's reactor produces so little > radiation is that most of the energy flows from f/H creation, with very > little > coming from actual nuclear reactions, and those few that do occur produce > either > a fast proton or a fast electron, or possibly multiple fast particles. > > > Regards, > > Robin van Spaandonk > > http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html > >

