Breaking down a nickel isotope to create antiprotons will require even more energy, IMHO.marvin57 wrote:The energy required to create a Muon in the lab is in excess of 100 MeV. That amount of energy would not be available from fusion events, it is true, but it might be available, for example, if one kind of breakdown of an isotope of nickel happened to produce an anti-proton.
I'll concede you that.marvin57 wrote:We don't know. We don't have the physics, yet, to outright claim that "such-and-such is impossible". No such definitive statement can be made.
We don't know.
Knowledge is still scarce in the area, but I can confidentially claim that if Rossi process really works it will not do it according the route you described.
We already have Axil proposing all type of nonsense theories here and there is really no need to add more.