Also at:
http://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Nuclear-Power/Scientists-must-Study-the-Nuclear-Weak-Force-to-Better-Understand-LENR.html
1 posted on
05/08/2013 4:30:46 PM PDT by
Kevmo
To: dangerdoc; citizen; Liberty1970; Red Badger; Wonder Warthog; PA Engineer; glock rocks; free_life; ..
2 posted on
05/08/2013 4:31:29 PM PDT by
Kevmo
("A person's a person, no matter how small" ~Horton Hears a Who)
To: Kevmo
I still want the free energy promised by that charlatan Reddy Kilowatt in the 50’s.
3 posted on
05/08/2013 4:37:18 PM PDT by
Paladin2
To: Kevmo
These forces could never happen by chance. There is indeed a God.
4 posted on
05/08/2013 4:46:09 PM PDT by
chesty_puller
(Viet Nam 1970-71 He who shed blood with me shall forever be my brother. Shak.)
To: Kevmo
In the early part of the 20th Century physicists theorized that a mysterious force held the nucleus of an atom together. When it was demonstrated that this force could be tapped, releasing tremendous amounts of energy, a wave of excitement swept the scientific world. It took only a few short years before atomic energy theories were experimentally validated in the first nuclear weapon detonations. Hiroshima and Nagasaki followed. Most of us alive today were born under the mushroom cloud that has loomed over humanity ever since. Accessing the power of the strong nuclear force has been a mixed blessing: it has brought the possibility of energy beyond our wildest dreams but with nightmarish consequences that were literally unimaginable a generation ago. Fission is the result of protons repelling each other, thus it is an example of the electromagnetic force.
11 posted on
05/10/2013 5:34:25 PM PDT by
Moonman62
(The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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