Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Cold Fission:

 

 

 

 

Helium does not decay into alpha and beta particles like many other atoms such as Uranium 238. Theses alpha particles consist of two protons and two neutrons bound together into a particle identical to the Helium nucleus. Whereas, beta particles are high energy, high speed electrons or positrons. In this study we are utilizing beta particles that are high speed electrons. What would the effect be if Helium is synthetically ionized into alpha and beta particles? The beta particles will leave the containment and in the containment, alpha particles will be attracted to the electrons in the orbital levels of the remaining Helium atoms. The alpha particles will attract the Helium atoms and spin around in the containment trying to turn itself back into Helium atoms. The alpha particles and Helium atoms will never reach homeostasis and always spin around in the containment. These alpha particles and Helium atoms will bounce around in the containment possibly generating perpetual static electricity on the outside of the containment which should be made of aluminum and can be used to produce perpetual DC electricity..

 

 

 

 

First, we also need to look at the pressure inside the containment during the Helium synthetic ionization. With an increase in pressure there would be a risk of the containment leaking. With a decrease in pressure the atoms and alpha particles will be further away from one another, limiting contact and decreasing the static electricity it produces. In this experiment, the pressure should be stable for a long time as the alpha particles will be attracted to the electrons of the Helium atoms. However, after a while if too many Helium atoms are ionized, the pressure will eventually decrease as there are fewer atoms contained and subsequently less electrons for the alpha particles to attract and bounce off of.

 

 

 

 

Alpha particles are bipolar. One side has a positive and the other positive separated by a neutral middle. The positive sides have a maximum attraction to electrons at where the orbital levels are in Helium. Therefore, the bipolar alpha particle will attract the electrons in the surviving Helium atoms and they will(alpha particles) simulate the Helium atom. However, if too many Helium atoms are ionized, there will not be enough electrons to attract and the alpha particles will float to the bottom as it is subject to gravity. Nevertheless, if not too many Helium atoms are ionized, alpha particles will simulate Helium atoms. Like Helium, the alpha particles will not be subject to gravity as Helium atoms are not as long as there are enough Helium atoms for the alpha particles to simulate.

 

 

 

 

What we are trying to generate is positive static electricity, which is the collection of electrically charged particles on the surface of a material. Some materials such as aluminum and lead are great at creating positive static electricity, whereas steel is neutral and gold is great for creating negative static electricity[1]. Lead is better at generating static electricity than aluminum, but it has a low melting point of 621.5 degrees F[2] compared to aluminum which is 1,220.666 degrees F[3. Therefore due to aluminum being a great positive static electricity generator and a relatively high melting point, it is what should be chosen as the skin of the containment. With an aluminum containment shell, the Helium atoms and alpha particles inside will bounce around each other and the skin of the containment, generating positive static electricity on the aluminum.

 

 

 

 

This experiment involves the containment of pure Helium with a field of 2.5727 Me V of electricity entering inside an aluminum shell. This will ionize some of the Helium atoms into alpha and beta particles. This may produce perpetual static electricity instead of looking for heat which is what happens in uranium fission.

 

 

 

 

I theorized that there needs to be an amount of Helium always in the containment to keep the spinning of the Helium and alpha particles in the containment. Therefore, the may be a maximum percentage of Helium ionization compared to non-Helium ionization that produces the most perpetual static electricity. This point of maximum static electricity will occur when the pressure of the containment start decreasing during ionization. This means there are more alpha particles and less Helium to have the alpha particles behaving similar to Helium atoms.

 

 

 

 

Last, static electricity is DC, when a discharge occurs, current flows in one direction, from positively charged areas to negatively charged areas. Nevertheless, when a static discharge occurs, such as lightning, the current rise and fall times are very quick, a few milliseconds or less. The issue with static electricity is that as soon as you try to harness it, the source is so limited that it discharges almost immediately like lightning. However, with this experiment the static electricity never ends as the alpha particles will chase the Helium atoms and never reach homeostasis and can be discharged continuously. Static electricity is created perpetually.

 

 

 

 

With Helium and alpha particles spinning around inside the containment skin of aluminum, static electricity may build up on the outside of the containment(Please note that a skin for the containment can not be steel as it is neutral to static electricity.) The alpha particles and Helium atoms will perpetually spin in the containment, causing the creation of continuous static electricity. This static electricity can be taped into DC electricity to provide new nuclear power that is perpetual with no radio active waste.

 

 

 

References:

 

 

 

 

[1] http://www.school-for-champions.com/science/static_materials.htm

 

[2] http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/pb.html

 

[3] http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/al.html

Posted (edited)

"Helium does not decay into alpha and beta particles like many other atoms such as Uranium 238."

Most of the atoms that we are familiar with don't decay.

 

"What would the effect be if Helium is synthetically ionized into alpha and beta particles?"

Broadly speaking, something like this.

 

http://images-mediawiki-sites.thefullwiki.org/06/1/4/8/90605423217213867.jpg

 

"The alpha particles will attract the Helium atoms and spin around"

Why would they spin?

"These alpha particles and Helium atoms will bounce around in the containment "

Nope, they would almost certainly pick up an electron or two the first time they hit any sort of containment.

 

I could go on. It's a valiant attempt, but it shows a deep lack of understanding of physics.

Edited by John Cuthber
Posted

The alpha particles and Helium atoms will never reach homeostasis and always spin around in the containment. These alpha particles and Helium atoms will bounce around in the containment possibly generating perpetual static electricity on the outside of the containment which should be made of aluminum and can be used to produce perpetual DC electricity..

 

No, they won't.

 

Any energy you might generate will be smaller than the energy it took to ionize the He in the first place.

 

What does this have to do with fission?

Posted

Welcome to scienceforums.net John J. Wright!:)

 

I think you need to learn some basic science before you start posting white papers here.

 

Bona fide science questions are answered with patience here. White papers based on voodoo science are not so kindly treated.

 

Chris

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.