RE: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Inverted Rydberg Matter

2011-11-07 Thread Roarty, Francis X
Axil,

I agree both forms of Rydberg matter could be involved in this 
anomaly but IMHO they both derive from normal hydrogen. When you stated [snip] 
D(-1) is the excited state of D(1) where protons and electrons chance places 
when sufficient kinetic energy is added to the D(1) species to form 
D(-1).[/snip] it seems like you are saying we must have Rydberg matter first to 
create IRM, D(1) -- D(-1). I am convinced that suppressing energy density via 
Casimir geometry isn't a freebie... to get that low energy density leading to 
IRH concentrated inside a cavity you must have a much larger but diluted field 
outside the cavity that exactly balances the lower energy density inside. That 
is too say the Casimir effect is actually a segregation of energy density that 
balances to zero. The larger area outside the cavity would lend itself well to 
Rydberg hydrogen while obviously the confinement inside the cavity lends itself 
better to IRH. As I have posited in previous threads, this would also lend 
support to claims of variations in decay rates in different radioactive gases 
when loaded into lattices where  LARGE accelerations of decay rate would 
correspond to gas that resides longer on average in the cavity geometry while 
SMALL delays in decay rate would be due to gas that resides longer outside the 
cavity. So D(1) or D(-1) is really just a matter of location - whether the gas 
is inside the cavity or outside the cavity. For that matter, If Naudts is 
correct than hydrogen remains locally unchanged and it is only the change in 
vacuum energy density that is giving these atoms an equivalent acceleration on 
a relativistic scale that results in what we perceive as Rydberg and Inverse 
Rydberg matter.



I would also still allow for an alternate solution to melting Pd and Zr [snip] 
In these experiments, the grains of pynco-deuterium powder show complete 
melting in micrographs by the extreme heat of a nuclear reaction even though 
the powder is made of mixture of palladium and zirconium oxide each with a very 
high melting point. [/snip]. I know oxygen must be excluded in this research 
but recall that much of the heat discovered in the Atomic Hydrogen Welder 
[which can even melt W] is not from normal combustion but rather re-association 
of hydrogen broken by an arc gap between tungsten rods. The lattice, changes in 
geometry [defects] and heat perform this same function of disassociating 
hydrogen to the point where Rayney nickel is even pyrophoric if steps are not 
taken to keep it wet. My point is that there may still be a phoric without 
the pyro as the geometry gets smaller and more active...maybe call it 
plasmaphoric?  where you simply have a runaway plasma shooting between these 
regions of Rydberg  h1h2 oscillating back and forth between bond states 
proportional to the change rate of suppression. It would keep getting faster 
and hotter in the areas of maximum confinement until the metals turn plastic 
and stiction forces grow shorts across the active geometry.

Fran


From: Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, November 07, 2011 2:44 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Inverted Rydberg Matter


There is a very good chance that both the non-inverted Rydberg matter 
abbreviated as D(1) and the inverted Rydberg matter abbreviated as D(-1) are 
both coherent assemblages of around 100 atoms more or less and that the 
entanglement an coherence of these assemblages are determinative in the way 
both the D(1) and the D(-1) species behave in the Rossi process.



D(-1) is the excited state of D(1) where protons and electrons chance places 
when sufficient kinetic energy is added to the D(1) species to form D(-1).



The structure of these assemblages is like a stack of pancakes of 20 or so of 
hexagonal flattened atomic structures where the quantum mechanical states of 
all electrons in D(1) and protons in D(-1) are identical, synchronized  and 
entangled.



In effect, the Rydberg matter of all 100 or so atoms behave as if the entire 
assemblage was a single large atom defined by a single QM wave form.



It may be that IRM that is comprised of the deuterium hydrogen isotope will 
produce nuclear reactions as seen in the experiments with pynco deuterium by 
Yoshiaki ARATA  Yue C. ZHANG.



In these experiments, the grains of pynco-deuterium powder show complete 
melting in micrographs by the extreme heat of a nuclear reaction even though 
the powder is made of mixture of palladium and zirconium oxide each with a very 
high melting point.





On the other hand, the nickel powder that supports Rossi's reaction has a very 
low melting point which is lowered further by a covering on each grain of 
nano-dimensional fibers of polycrystalline nickel.



This powder is purported to survive for months of continual use even though the 
nickel undergoes transmutation to copper is high percentages. This speaks 
against the source of heat being nuclear fission

Re: [Vo]:Inverted Rydberg Matter

2011-11-07 Thread mixent
In reply to  Axil Axil's message of Mon, 7 Nov 2011 02:44:15 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
*D(-1) is the excited state of D(1) where protons and electrons chance
places when sufficient kinetic energy is added to the D(1) species to form
D(-1).*

The reduction in potential energy should more than compensate for the additional
kinetic energy. IOW formation of D(-1) should be exothermic (by hundreds of eV).

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html



Re: [Vo]:Inverted Rydberg Matter

2011-11-06 Thread Axil Axil
*There is a very good chance that both the non-inverted Rydberg matter
abbreviated as D(1) and the inverted Rydberg matter abbreviated as D(-1)
are both coherent assemblages of around 100 atoms more or less and that the
entanglement an coherence of these assemblages are determinative in the way
both the D(1) and the D(-1) species behave in the Rossi process.*

* *

*D(-1) is the excited state of D(1) where protons and electrons chance
places when sufficient kinetic energy is added to the D(1) species to form
D(-1).*

* *

*The structure of these assemblages is like a stack of pancakes of 20 or so
of hexagonal flattened atomic structures where the quantum mechanical
states of all electrons in D(1) and protons in D(-1) are identical,
synchronized  and entangled.*

* *

*In effect, the Rydberg matter of all 100 or so atoms behave as if the
entire assemblage was a single large atom defined by a single QM wave form.
 *

* *

*It may be that IRM that is comprised of the deuterium hydrogen isotope
will produce nuclear reactions as seen in the experiments with pynco
deuterium by Yoshiaki ARATA  Yue C. ZHANG. *

* *

*In these experiments, the grains of pynco-deuterium powder show complete
melting in micrographs by the extreme heat of a nuclear reaction even
though the powder is made of mixture of palladium and zirconium oxide each
with a very high melting point.*

* *

* *

*On the other hand, the nickel powder that supports Rossi’s reaction has a
very low melting point which is lowered further by a covering on each grain
of nano-dimensional fibers of polycrystalline nickel.*

* *

*This powder is purported to survive for months of continual use even
though the nickel undergoes transmutation to copper is high percentages.
This speaks against the source of heat being nuclear fission or fusion as
we commonly understand these processes.*

* *

*The  fermionic condensate formed by fermionic particles: namely protons in
the Rossi D(-1) must transfer heat from a  quantum mechanical mechanism
other than fission or fusion because of the low temperature nature of that
heat source.*

* *

*The heat of the Rossi reaction must be from an as yet unknown quantum
process(es) in the lattice defects where the D(-1) some how picks up energy
and continually transfers it to the surrounding lattice when the proper
lattice excitation temperature is reached.*

* *

*Copper transmutation in the micro-powder may be a side reaction caused by
proton tunneling expelled from the D(-1) as hydrogen is continually
recycled and replenished into the defect structures in and around the
nano-fibers.*

* *

*The quantum blockade of the fermionic condensate in the defects must
reduce the gamma emissions of the copper formation process into the x-ray
radiation range and speed up or eliminate nuclear product decay processes
formed by proton absorption in nickel.*

* *

* *

* *


On Sun, Nov 6, 2011 at 4:26 PM, Jeff Driscoll hcarb...@gmail.com wrote:

 Regarding ultra dense deuterium, George Miley and Leif Holmlid:

  In Rydberg matter:
 -  the electrons and protons are inverted in terms of a metal (though
 not clear what this means)
 - the distance between nuclei in the planar Rydberg matter made from
 deuterium is on the order of 150 picometers.  This is the non-inverted
 Rydberg matter termed D(1) by Holmlid.
 - there is a planar nature to the outer electron orbits

 But I can't figure out how they calculate the 2.3 picometer  spacing
 distance in the D(-1) inverted Rydberg matter.

 Apparently they irradiate the surface with just enough energy to
 create deuterium atoms that have a kinetic energy of 630 eV.  Then
 they conclude that the deuterium  spacing of the inverted Rydberg
 matter D(-1) being irradiated is 2.3 picometers.

 They also create either protons or neutrons with kinetic energies of
 1.8 MeV which has to be nuclear in origin - though I suppose it's
 possible there is some sort of Mills hydrino process that can lead to
 some nuclear process.

 I have a website that describes Mills's theory.  It can be seen here
 www.zhydrogen.com

 ===

 From Holmlid's website:

 My main research interest is Rydberg Matter, which is a state of
 matter of the same status as liquid or solid, since it can be formed
 by a large number of atoms and small molecules. For a more complete
 description, see Wikipedia.

 The lowest state of Rydberg Matter in excitation state n = 1 can only
 be formed from hydrogen (protium and deuterium) atoms and is
 designated H(1) or D(1). This is dense or metallic hydrogen, which we
 have studied for a few years. The bond distance is 153 pm, or 2.9
 times the Bohr radius. It is a quantum fluid, with a density of
 approximately 0.6 kg / dm3. See for example Ref. 167 below!

 A much denser state exists for deuterium, named D(-1). We call it
 ultra-dense deuterium. This is the inverse of D(1), and the bond
 distance is very small, equal to 2.3 pm. Its density is extremely
 large, 130 kg /