-----Original Message----- From: [email protected] I have two questions.
1) What is the actual mechanism that brings about fusion? With the BEC experiments that we know about, condensates like Rb can suddenly swing into strong attraction and implode. At Cornell, about two-thirds of condensed rubidium atoms "disappeared" from the experiment altogether. There was no local energy deficit and no report of an energy anomaly, but still the incident is "telling" as to the mechanism. This and other characteristics of Bose-Einstein condensates cannot be explained with any current theory. My hypothesis is that negative temperature induces actual fusion with the help of just such an attraction event when there is a local energy deficit, such as in a Casimir cavity ... where earlier there had been a few million sequential "first stage" events. The deficit will actually stimulate the attraction, and then the fusion. This permits the 'first stage' processes, like Casimir heating, to resume, with the excess energy coming in the form of UV light at 6.8 eV per relativistic bounce within the cavity, for instance. The reason that these initial processes can be so hard to replicate, is probably that there must be an expedited pathway to an actual nuclear reaction - but that reaction itself does not "have to be" fusion. Thus everyone in the fizzix mainstream will tell you that there is no such phenomenon as 'Casimir heating' ... but is that because they have never seen it with a proper pathway - as with Rossi's nanopowder (presumably). If the Focardi/Rossi experiments are real and repeatable, then in that case it appears the "book balancing" reaction involves the conversion of nickel to copper via induced beta decay. Extreme levels of transmutation to Cu are documented, and since this class of reaction is far less energetic than deuterium fusion - a great abundance of copper, where there had been none before, is to be expected. My prediction is that when all is told, we will learn that the BLP sodium-hydride reaction produces copious magnesium - for the same underlying reason. It is LENR and nothing less. 2) Why is the deficit always exactly equal to the fusion energy, and not of varying sizes? It isn't exact, in my opinion. There is probably a threshold level however.

