Mike Carrell wrote:

>> ... The "ground state" is
>> simply the relaxed state in a vacuum, neither ionized nor catalyzed.
>> Mills' discovery is that the fractional state can be reached by
>> selective catalysis under special conditions.

>From Stephen Lawrence:

> I have a Very Dumb Question here.
>
> Is there a simple, concise explanation of why a hydrogen atom can't
> spontaneously collapse to a hydrino, by radiating away the transition
> energy as a photon?
>
> I.e., why is a collision with a catalyst necessary?
>
> If the only simple answer is "Don't be so lazy, Read The Book", well,
> whatever ... but I'm hoping it's possible for someone here to give an
> approximate summary of the reason in a few sentences.

I certainly don't have the answer.

But while we're on a role, that is, posting "dumb" questions, let me
post one of my own:

If scabs of these teeny tiny hydrino species are assumed to comprise
so much of the "dark matter" skittering about in our universe (in
mostly undetected states) howcum they don't seem capable of coalescing
into stars like normal visible hydrogen appears to do? I mean... if
they are affected by gravitation just like all the other visible atoms
in the universe...

...or maybe they DO coalesce????

My memory may be faulty on this matter, but I seem to recall Mills
saying once on a forum that according to his CQM theory many stars ARE
born from hydrino formation.

Regards
Steven Vincent Johnson
www.OrionWorks.com
www.zazzle.com/orionworks

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