Monday, January 01, 2007

How Anvils May Power Atomic Physics...In a discussion of superpressure, I once read in an old physics textbook how superpressure was being used to compress many solids (like water was considered to be noncompressable before this). The 1960's vintage author even speculated that if pressure were increased enough with anvils, this would cause usual atoms of mass to fuse. Perhaps better than using usual anvils made of atoms, if the anvils or the tips were made of hadrons (like protons and neutrons) this may be a real source of fusion. If of worth it may also use the strong force to save billions on atom smashers. Compared to using anvils or Focus Fusion, using the small mass of a tiny meson's weight of motion and hoping it hits just so to power the reactions may not be all there is! A lever is much more of power than a fan of mostly air. The strong force is much more dense than electricity, so it may be much cheaper to use the strong force for the accelerator of particle physics.
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.Another possiblity is Lerner's focus fusion. Focus fusion uses a small electromagnetic field to guide in the much stronger strong force of hadrons so fusion of just a few protons and neutrons takes place. I think since this is a miniature of the way a fusion bomb is detonated with implosion of conventinal explosives the source of the fusion, this is a sound invention. However it must overcome the outer electric charges of the atoms since there is no other stable strong force particle than the proton with - charge, so the only particles stable enough to slam in are inside the atoms. Even with lots of progress with Focus Fusion this seems to be why no major breakthroughs have been achieved even with this good idea. This is why my idea of the ATOMIC SPIN MOTOR may be of more worth. The motor would win by tapping the spin of a proton wire, the protons secured by their opposite alternation of N S magnetic poles. An electron or other beam would pass by the outside of the proton, changing its wavelength to be collected as power on the other side.
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