Rare Nuclear Fusion Detected
Pooua writes "Scientists at the Indiana University Cyclotron Facility in Bloomington have detected a rare fusion process that employs a critical charge asymmetry.
"'Scientists have searched for this rare fusion process since the 1950s,' said IU physicist Edward Stephenson, the leader of the research team.
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It is good to know because it is useful for the theory. If you do not test hard theory predictions with experimental data, or you cannot progress with the theory.
Understanding quarks is useful for learning about how world realy works on a very small scale, and about the origins of universe; do not expect antigravity machine and time travel discovery.
I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it