Maybe someone can shed a light.

How are Celani's comments, cooper pairing and Kim's BECNF theory related ?
- If they are related, why doesn't Celani mention Kim in his presentation,
he mentions almost all other proposed theories ?

Moab

On Sat, Jan 7, 2012 at 7:27 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> "Cooper pairing" is a quantum effect of protons which has been mentioned by
> Axil and others wrt Rossi. Cooper pairing is possible in all Fermions, not
> just electrons. This terminology is a bit confusing, and it is too bad we
> do
> not have a different name for it with protons - since Leon Cooper did not
> go
> that far.
>
> This paper from Leinson relates to a cooling effect seen in neutron stars,
> claimed to be due to Cooper pairing of protons. I was not aware that
> substantial numbers of protons even existed in neutron stars.
>
> http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0009/0009050v2.pdf
>
> Anyway, the cooling mechanism consists of shedding of neutrinos from paired
> protons. If the phenomenon exists in neutron stars on a massive scale, then
> perhaps it exists in "dense clusters" or IRH (inverted Rydberg hydrogen) on
> a lesser scale.
>
> But it is a cooling effect !
>
> This is extremely important for a little known reason (except to a few
> vorticians). In Brian Ahern's work on the "Arata effect", which is probably
> the same thing as the "Thermacore/Piantelli/Rossi/Ni-H effect" - but is NOT
> the F-P effect - Ahern has found both anomalous heating and anomalous
> COOLING. The only thing which changes is interatomic spacing .
>
> The cross-connection of these temperature anomalies to BCS
> superconductivity
> is curious in light of Cooper pairing at temperatures which are not near
> absolute zero. I do not place a lot of faith in Leinson's paper yet, for
> several reason, and Ahern's report to EPRI has not been released for
> publication yet. But when it is - perhaps we will be able to tie a lattice
> cooling effecting with dense hydrogen (pycno or IRH) into a range of
> expected and predictable phenomena - along with Romanowski. It is all about
> interatomic geometry in the 1-3 Angstrom range (Figures 1,2,3 in the
> Romanowski paper).
>
> But a cooling effect is so extremely surprising - especially in similar
> circumstances to where anomalous heating is seen - that we should take
> special note of it all - especially with the missing ingredient :
> "compreture".
>
> Jones
>
>

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