IRH or Inverted Rydberg Hydrogen is Miley's version of dense hydrogen. It is
really, really dense.

http://www.ias-spes.org/SPESIF2010/FORUM/Abstracts/Miley_032_abs.html

If I am reading this correctly, Miley says the distance between nucleons  is
<2.5 picometers. If the normal atomic diameter of hydrogen is >150 pm then
the number of hydrogen atoms (IRH) which can theoretically fit into a nickel
nanocavity is greater by a comparative factor of the cube of 60, correct?
That would be a ratio of roughly 216000:1, give or take - and that is
compared to metallic hydrogen. 

. burp . If there is anything like a metaphorical Lawson criteria for LENR,
then this incredible density level would lower it correspondingly, no? I do
not think that is what is happening, but the point is that "all bets are
off" in looking for guidance to known hot fusion reactions - as a way to
explain dense hydrogen reactions.

Jones

Reply via email to