During a typical replication run of the Rossi effect, the pressure of the hydrogen gas goes down over a relatively short timeframe. This might mean that hydrogen Rydberg matter(HRM) has formed in major part because gas is transformed into a solid. But the reaction does not take off immediately. It might be that the energy needed for the HRM to produce heavy SPP solitons need more time to accumulate. The Rossi reaction may be a two step process that first forms rydberg matter, then that HRM accumulates energy in SPPs to form the real cause of LENR: SPP black holes.
On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 11:37 AM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote: > Why does it take so long for the Holmlid effect to manifest? > > When you have to pump energy into a population of black holes that stores > huge amounts of energy, it take time and a lot of EMF power to do this. But > once these solitons are well formed and their power storage threshold is > reached, they become exquisitely responsive to any additional energy input. > > > This is the reason why the Rossi replicators cannot get a quick response. > They don't keep at it for long enough. Rossi must cook his fuel for a long > time to deposit enough energy into those solitons for them to become active. > > I believe that application of just heat and laser light is not powerful > enough EMF stimulation to fill up the energy bucket to the proper level. An > electric arc might be the best way to pump power into the solitons. > > The lessen to take away, use an electric arc to preprocess your fuel. It > will save a lot of time. > > On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 11:16 AM, Eric Walker <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 9:57 AM, Bob Higgins <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >> Does anyone else find these just too incredible to believe? >>> >> >> Very much so. I should spend some time looking at the raw data. Holmlid >> may have something interesting. His interpretation may have sufficiently >> alienated the people who could help him interpret his results that he may >> be a little in a bind. Energy conservation considerations point to a >> misinterpretation of some kind on his part. >> >> While these things truly offend my physical sensibilities, having these >>> nervous concerns also makes me worry that I am becoming a patho-skeptic. >>> >> >> Not at all. What is important is to not write off raw experimental >> data. Explanations of the data are always fair game. >> >> Eric >> >> >

