| Title: | AN EXPLANATION OF EARTHQUAKES BY THE BLACKLIGHT PROCESS AND HYDROGEN FUSION |
| DOI No: | 10.1142/9789812772985_0062 |
| Source: | CONDENSED MATTER NUCLEAR SCIENCE (pp 577-581)
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| Author(s): | HIROSHI YAMAMOTO
3110-17 Tsuzuki, Mikkabi-Cho, Hamamatsu-City, Shizuoka-Pref. 431-1402, Japan
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| Abstract: | The recent deployment of many seismometers and occurrences of earthquakes in Japan revealed explosive nature of earthquakes. There have been a few reports that earthquakes and eruption of helium gas took place simultaneously, but there has been no hypothesis to correlate each other. Recently, a new idea that atomic hydrogen can generate energy through a mechanism between chemical reaction and nuclear reaction by lowering the electron orbit from the ground state to lower state has emerged. A hydrogen atom with much lower orbit below the ground state naturally has lower Coulomb barrier and would be much easier to fuse each other, resulting in the generation of helium. It is known that water injection into deep wells can cause earthquakes. Water can be dissociated into atomic hydrogen by metals in a very hot condition at the mantle. This paper proposes a hypothesis that the power source of earthquakes is hydrogen fusion, which takes place after accumulation of atomic hydrogen gas and subsequent pressure drop due to cracks of the surrounding rocks. |
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