http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2017/jun/12/superfluid-polaritons-seen-at-room-temperature

Superfluid polaritons seen at room temperature

the polaritons behave like a fluid that can flow without friction around
obstacles, which were formed by using a laser to burn small holes in the
organic material. This is interpreted by the researchers as being a
signature of the superfluid behaviour.

there might be some sort of link between a superfluid and a Bose–Einstein
condensate (BEC) – the latter being a state of matter in which all
constituent particles have condensed into a single quantum state. He was
proved right in 1995 when superfluidity was observed in BECs made from
ultracold atoms



On Thu, Jun 8, 2017 at 1:54 PM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:

> A Bose condinsate brings super radiance and super absorption into play.
> These mechanisms produce concentration, storage,  and amplification of low
> level energy and goes as "N", the number of items in the condinsate.
>
> On Thu, Jun 8, 2017 at 9:46 AM, Frank Znidarsic <fznidar...@aol.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Why is a Bose Condensate needed?  Its a matter of size and energy.  The
>> smaller the size of something we want to see the more energy it takes.
>> Using low energy radar you will never be able to read something as small as
>> this text.  You need to go to UV energies to study atoms.  Higher ionizing
>> energies are needed to study the nuclear forces.  Really high energy
>> accelerator energies are required to look at subatomic particles.
>>
>> The common complaint physicists have with cold fusion is that the energy
>> levels are to low to induce any type of nuclear reaction.  They never,
>> however, considered the energy levels of a large hundreds of atoms wide
>> condensed nano-particle.  Its energy levels are quite low.  Warm thermal
>> vibrations appear to the nano particle as a high energy excitation.  This
>> again is a matter of its size.  It's not cracks, or shrunken atoms at
>> work.  It is the thermal excitation of a nano particle that yields the
>> required energy.
>>
>> Again the simulation induces a velocity of one million meters per second.
>>
>> Frank Z
>>
>>
>>
>>
>

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