Does anyone here understand this branch of science?

Superradiance - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



 
 
 
 
 
 
Superradiance - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In physics, the term superradiance is used to refer to radiation enhancement 
effects in several contexts including quantum mechanics, astrophysics and 
relativity.  
View on en.wikipedia.org Preview by Yahoo  
 
 I borrowed this on my upcoming video, hours away:
Superradiant Krypton Discharge
http://youtu.be/SBcI0yZMILo

Pioneering the Applications of Interphasal Resonances 
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/teslafy/ 


On Saturday, August 30, 2014 10:41 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:
  


 
This is the guy who merged
superradiance into LENR. 
  
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giuliano_Preparata 
  
The key concept you may be
looking for is a type of positive feedback called “lock-in”. Robert Dicke was 
responsible
for developing the "lock-in amplifier" which is an indispensable tool
in EE.  
  
Superradiance is not
gainful in itself. It is balanced by subradiance. However, secondary effects,
which are ostensibly unrelated, can leverage superradiance into net gain (or
turn subradiance into anomalous cooling).  
  
  
From:Axil Axil  
  
Some of the us vortex folks think LENR
involves superradiance based on magnetic polaritons. I don't yet understand is
how infrared photons are converted to a condensed ultra short burst of an
intense magnetic field. Does anyone understand how superradiance can produce a
burst of magnetic energy?

Superradiance intensity goes as the N^2 of the number of polaritons. Pulse
duration goes as 1/N of the number of polaritons. That scaling relationship
will produce a powerful pulse when there is 10^23 polaritons confined in the
magnetic polariton soliton. That means that the pulse has an amplification
factor of 10^46 of a photon spin of 1. How many tesla does that workout to?

Does anyone here understand this branch of science?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superradiance

or those who think Wikipedia is or dummies, reference this:

http://arxiv.org/pdf/1112.1298v1.pdf    

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