Gremlins come in different colors:

Brown dwarf ~  Brown Gremlin
White dwarf ~   White Gremiln
Black hole ~.    Black Gremlin
Micro black hole ~ Invisible Gremlin

The smaller they are the more elusive and more trouble they cause in their
surroundings.

On Thursday, August 23, 2012, ChemE Stewart wrote:

> Jones,
>
> I agree.  I believe this reaction starts with a collapse of matter
> compressed within a crack or void.  As in the macro scale universe, the
> degree of collapse may vary all the way down to a micro black hole, which
> is the extreme case.  Any collapse should be instantly followed by a burst
> of energy, as observed.
>
> It makes sense that Rydberg or inverted Rydberg matter should be more
> reactive since you can cram more mass into a given size void due to its
> ultra-high densities.
>
> Add electrical charge, compression and the repulsion from the walls of the
> crack/void and you get the correct environment for a further collapse of
> matter.
>
> If the collapsed matter hangs around it should have extreme localized
> blue-shifted radiation near it's surface to trigger fission and fusion
> events with other atoms near its surface.  It may or may not evaporate
> completely and in my opinion would be a bad actor if it hangs around.
>
> It would also create magnified quantum mechanical/uncertainty events in
> its surroundings if it does hang around and behave like a super atom.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wednesday, August 22, 2012, Jones Beene wrote:
>
>> The Rice/Kim paper below gives a pretty good introduction to the DDL or
>> Deep
>> Dirac Layer (put forth by Maly and Va'vra in Fusion Technology). Rice/Kim
>> et
>> al make a valiant effort to disprove, or at least cast doubt on the
>> reality
>> of the DDL, but the underlying assumptions in eq. 9,10,11 have problems of
>> their own.
>>
>> http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/RiceRAcommentsona.pdf
>>
>> Curiously Rice/Kim et al do not mention Miley & Holmlid's conception of
>> IRH,
>> or Inverted Rydberg Hydrogen. But they do mention Mills conception of
>> deeply
>> redundant ground states, but not accurately.
>>
>> At any rate - the main point of all this is the similarity of Mills,
>> Miley &
>> Holmlid and Maly & Va'vra - at least when all of their suggestions are
>> taken
>> together and mashed, so to speak; making a putative case for the identity
>> of
>> so-called dark matter. Perhaps one must cherry-pick amongst them to get
>> the
>> best details, but there seems to be something very intuitive in this
>> correlation of dense-hydrogen to dark matter.
>>
>> All of them, and Mills is first in the chronology IIRC, suggest that this
>> dense state of hydrogen can be the "ash" of reactions such as those which
>> occur in the corona of our sun and most other starts, and which the end
>> product consists of tightly bound hydrogen atoms with an extremely tight
>> orbital. This has appeal in being the best way to account for the missing
>> mass (dark matter) of the universe, since that mass is really nothing new
>> at
>> all, but is in effect another form of hydrogen. The electron orbit radius
>> of
>> the DDL is only ~ 5 fm.
>>
>> I mention this today since the group has been graced by the presence of
>> the
>> honorable Mark Gibbs, who may be looking for every science journalist's
>> dream story - to not just report the little incremental advances in
>> science
>> - but to pick a winner of major importance and deep significance.  A game
>> changer.
>>
>> Jones
>>
>

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