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On Fri, 27 Jun 2025 5:47:10 +0000, Chris M. Thomasson wrote:
On 6/26/2025 10:37 PM, Chris M. Thomasson wrote:On 6/26/2025 8:47 PM, Bertitaylor wrote:>On Thu, 26 Jun 2025 13:23:35 +0000, Paul.B.Andersen wrote:>
>Den 26.06.2025 09:15, skrev bertitaylor:>On Wed, 25 Jun 2025 17:30:27 +0000, Jim Pennino wrote:>
>In sci.physics Bertitaylor <bertietaylor@myyahoo.com> wrote:On Mon, 23 Jun 2025 18:54:15 +0000, Paul.B.Andersen wrote:
>Den 23.06.2025 05:47, skrev bertietaylor:>
When Arindam says that the core of any star must be very cold, then
bang
phut goes the above precious E=mcc theory.
>>>>>
Can you please explain Arindam's theory?Where does the radiated energy come from?>
Deuterium fission.>Deuterium is stable, does not undergo radioactive decay, and thus>
cannot
undergo fission, crackpot.
Fool, we are not talking about deuterium on Earth, decaying naturally.
Things are different in the Sun's atmosphere. Lots of heat, radiation,
charged particles, very dense there.
And no deuterium is decaying, but a lot of deuterium nuclei are fused
to Helium.
>It is deuterium fission which provides the energy for the hydrogen>
bombs
on Earth.
Good grief, what a gigantic blunder!
Yes it was the most gigantic blunder to think that fusion at all
happens.
>
:-D>>
It obviously is _fusion_ of H and T in a hydrogen bomb.
Very not obviously. The fission of the deuterium nucleus (two protons
held by one electron) creates extraordinary force creating great
energies as produced by the stars.
Fusion for stars? fission to to kick artificially kick of the reaction.
Or ICF or something.
>
[...]
several tanks with a metal hydride for different isotopes eof hydrogen.
Stored...Ready for reaction.
Won't work, you need lotsa intense gamma rays, high energy particles as
well to disturb the two protons in the deuterium nucleus to fission with
snapping of the electron bond holding them together.
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