1. Handbook of Hot Atom Chemistry (J. P. ADLOFF, P. P. GASPAR, M. IMAMURA, A. G. MADDOCK, T. MATSUURA, H. SANO, K. YOSHIHARA (Eds)) Kodansha Ltd., Tokyo, and VCH Verlagsgesellschaft, Weinheim, 1992.
2. Not later than 1975 MADDOCK has indicated that due to the small precision of the measurements of annealing experiments nearly every combination of activation energy and frequency factor can be obtained and that in addition much freedom exists concerning the reaction order; A. G. MADDOCK, Physical Chemistry, Vol. 7, Reactions in Condensed Phases, H. EYRING (Ed.), Academic Press, New York, San Francisco and London, 1975, p. 473.
3. J. I. VARGAS, A. G. MADDOCK, Chemical Effects of Nuclear Transformations in Inorganic Systems, G. HARBOTTLE, A. G. MADDOCK (Eds), North-Holland, Amsterdam, New York and Oxford, 1979, p. 461.
4. T. S. KUHN, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions; Univ. of Chicago, 1st ed., 1962, 2nd ed. 1970.
5. Sir Francis BACON (Francisco de VERULAMIO, 1561–1626), Instauratio Magna-Novum Organum, Vol. 2, London, 1620, §11 ff.