I was watching a BBc documentary about cold fusion.Here is the link for the video.I posted it in my second blog.
The BBC people refused to accept that this scientist created nuclear fusion because they could not detect any neutrons at the exact moment when the photon of energy was detected.
My question is,do the neutrons travel at the speed of light?If not,how can the photons which are traveling at the speed of light and the neutrons can be detected at the exact same moment?
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- 2008-05-25 @ 15:41:10
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- 2008-05-25 @ 17:05:50
Sorry safriz, you lost me with the question, great that ranfuchs is here to give you his answer and I do kinda understand the comment.
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- http://www.jenniferhunter.co.uk
- 2008-06-01 @ 19:42:31
Oh, so sorry to be so late coming to some of these questions, missed them and have just found them...LOL...
Here's a bit of food for thought, which I don't really know whether this Doctor's ideas are wrong, but they make for interesting reading...
http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/new/milewski.htm
Found this years ago, and it has always stuck in my memory...
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- http://www.conspiror.blog.co.uk
- 2008-06-04 @ 00:11:06
great stuff jenray.thanks
ranfuchs
Pro


Neutrons are much slower. In most experiments you would adjust for the difference in speed. It's like you know that thunder and lightning happen at the same moment, even though you, as an observer, detect them at different time