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Home / Publications / Journals / Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 19 / Number 3P1

Electropionics and Fusion

John P. Kenny

Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 19 / Number 3P1 / May 1991 / Pages 547-551

Technical Note on Cold Fusion / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST91-A29396

The electropionic mass formula does not differentiate between nuclei and elementary particles, but it gives the deuteron a unique bifurcated space-time description. This hints at fusion products produced by anomalous intermediate mass states of 3026, 3194, and 3515 MeV/c2 that then decay to produce energy. Another unique possibility in electropionics is that no fusion of deuterons occurs, but the deuteron is changed by electron capture into a D-meson that then decays to produce observed cold fusion energies. All these cold fusion electropionic reactions violate baryon conservation but do produce energy yields consistent with reported cold fusion decay products and energy levels.