https://phys.org/news/2017-01-physicists-spontaneous-symmetry-optical-microcavity.html


Physicists have observed spontaneous symmetry breaking in an optical
microcavity, they have demonstrated* experimentally the emergence of
*spontaneous
symmetry breaking <https://phys.org/tags/spontaneous+symmetry+breaking/>* in
an ultrahigh-Q whispering-gallery microresonator. The *Optical* whispering
gallery (WGW) microcavity is the structural form that the Surface Plasmon
Polariton assumed in LENR. . These *whispering gallery modes
<https://phys.org/tags/whispering+gallery+modes/>* are analogous to the
acoustic resonances in the whispering gallery in St. Paul Cathedral in
London.*


*A critical clue to the role of symmetry breaking in LENR is the
observation that the application of an electrostatic field
catalyzes spontaneous symmetry breaking in the WGW via the Kerr effect. *


*​*

*The application of an *electrostatic* field has been listed as a trigger
of the LENR reaction in Rossi's patent. When this electrostatic field is
applied, the WGW produces symmetry breaking which induces a energy transfer
between a proton and a simultaneous decay in that proton via a symmetry
breaking based entangled interface.  *

On Sat, Apr 8, 2017 at 4:06 PM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
>    1. The process by which the proton decays in LENR.
>
>    Some esoteric process is causing the proton to decay in LENR. This
>    process is the root source for the production of energy and sub atomic
>    particles in LENR.
>
>
>    Whatever is causing the proton to decay into strange matter is a new
>    unrecognized if not unknown process in physics. This cause is not part of
>    current standard model theory. This makes LENR theory doubly hard and
>    mysterious. Not only do we need to explain the characteristics of LENR, but
>    also LENR thinking gets involved in unrecognized physics that is itself
>    ill-defined and speculative and rooted in solving the hardest and still
>    unexplained issues in physics. As we go through this string of dots, you
>    will get a feel for why LENR theory will not be fully understood for
>    another century.
>
>    Gathering the dots together.
>
>    Before we attempt to connect the dots relegated to proton decay, we
>    must define them and gather them together.
>
>    https://phys.org/news/2017-04-insight-math-million-dollar-
>    problem-riemann.html
>
>    Solving the Riemann hypothesis
>
>    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemann_hypothesis
>
>
>    In mathematics, the Riemann hypothesis is a conjecture that the
>    Riemann zeta function has its zeros only at the negative even integers and
>    complex numbers with real part 1/2. It was proposed by Bernhard Riemann,
>    after whom it is named. The name is also used for some closely related
>    analogues, such as the Riemann hypothesis for curves over finite fields.
>
>    The Riemann hypothesis implies results about the distribution of prime
>    numbers. Along with suitable generalizations, some mathematicians consider
>    it the most important unresolved problem in pure mathematics.
>
>    The complex number system on which this conjecture is based was
>    thought to have no meaning or application to any physical property in
>    reality. But this feeling has turned out to be wrong.
>
>    In 1999, it was suggested by David Hilbert and George Pólya that in
>    the nontrivial zeros form a set of real and discrete numbers in the Riemann
>    zeta function are just like the eigenvalues of another function called a
>    differential operator, which is widely used in physics.
>
>    This special newly discovered operator has close ties with quantum
>    physics. The special operator in quantum physics is not Parity / Time (PT)
>    symmetric in the complex number domain. If it can be shown that the PT
>    symmetry is broken for the imaginary part of the operator, then it would
>    follow that the eigenvalues are all real numbers, which would finally
>    constitute the long-awaited proof of the Riemann hypothesis.
>
>
>    One of the pivotal dots to be connected in proton decay is Parity /
>    Time (PT) symmetry breaking.
>
>    http://www.europhysicsnews.org/articles/epn/pdf/2016/02/
>    epn2016472p17.pdf
>
>    PT-symmetric quantum mechanics is an extension of conventional quantum
>    mechanics into the complex domain. (PT symmetry is not in conflict with
>    conventional quantum theory but is merely a complex generalization of it.)
>    PT-symmetric quantum mechanics was originally considered to be an
>    interesting mathematical discovery but with little or no hope of practical
>    application, but beginning in 2007 it became a hot area of experimental
>    physics.
>
>
>    The connection between PT symmetry, LENR, Proton decay is whispering
>    gallery waves.
>
>
>    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4830925/
>
>    Because of their complex number based quantum behavior, whispering
>    gallery waves (WGW) have mysterious properties that are seen in LENR. In
>    whispering gallery waves, the complex number system relates to the index of
>    refraction of the light contained in WGW type of the optical cavity. When
>    two WGWs are near each other, there is a one way flow of energy between
>    them and a translation of frequencies associated with that transfer. This
>    energy extraction process is unleashed by PT symmetry breaking and the
>    decay that this symmetry breaking produces.
>
>    The WGW is the structure that gives form to the Surface Plasmon
>    Polariton. Via the SPP, the energy extraction process whereby the WPW pulls
>    energy out of the proton includes a PT symmetry breaking process. This PT
>    symmetry breaking frees the energy content of the proton as SPP breaks the
>    PT symmetry that keeps the protons or neutrons from decaying.
>
>    The color force and proton stability is based on maintaining CPT
>    stability. Here are some old posts that explain this behavior of the color
>    force:
>
>    https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/thread/3736-the-
>    possible-role-of-axions-in-lenr/
>    
> <https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/thread/3736-the-possible-role-of-axions-in-lenr/>
>
>    and
>
>    https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/thread/3736-the-
>    possible-role-of-axions-in-lenr/?postID=35394#post35394
>    
> <https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/thread/3736-the-possible-role-of-axions-in-lenr/?postID=35394#post35394>
>
>

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