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   sci.physics      Physical laws, properties, etc.      178,769 messages   

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   Message 177,792 of 178,769   
   Chris M. Thomasson to Chris M. Thomasson   
   Re: Dark matter is the core of stars (mi   
   26 Jun 25 22:44:39   
   
   XPost: sci.physics.relativity, sci.math   
   From: chris.m.thomasson.1@gmail.com   
      
   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  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.   
   >   
   > [...]   
      
   Use a metal hydride to efficiently store isotopes of hydrogen.   
      
   --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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