That paper is gone from Y.E. Kim's faculty page at Purdue.   I found it on
lenr-forum.com



Theoretical Analysis and Reaction Mechanisms for
Experimental Results of Hydrogen-Nickel Systems

https://www.lenr-forum.com/attachment/391-iccf-18-jcmns-kh-pre-1-pdf/



Purdue Nuclear and Many-Body Theory Group (PNMBTG) Preprint- PNMBTG-10-2013
(October 2013)
Invited paper presented at the 18th International Conference on Cold Fusion
(ICCF-18), University of
Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, July 21-27, 2013, to be published in the
ICCF-18 Proceedings.
Theoretical Analysis and Reaction Mechanisms for


Experimental Results of Hydrogen-Nickel Systems

Yeong E. Kim1 and John Hadjichristos 2


1Department of Physics, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907,
USA, ye...@purdue.edu
2Defkalion Green Technologies Corporation, 1140 Homer Street, Suite 250,
Vancouver BC V682X6, Canada



Abstract—Experimental results for anomalous heat effect and super magnetic
field observed for hydrogen-Nickel systems
are described. Theoretical analysis and reaction mechanisms are presented
using theory of Boson cluster state nuclear fusion
(BCSNF) based on the optical theorem formulation. Observed excess heat
generation and anomalously large magnetic field
are explained by theoretical descriptions based on nano-scale explosions
(“Bosenova”) and proton supper currents.
Index Terms—Hydrogen fusion in metals, Boson cluster state nuclear fusion,
excess heat generation, anomalous super
magnetic field.


1. Introduction
 Recently, the experimental results of excess heat generation with
hydrogen-Nickel systems have been reported [1].
Over the past twenty four years, there have been many publications
reporting experimental observations of excess heat
generation and anomalous nuclear reactions occurring in metals at ultra-low
energies, now known as the FleischmannPons
effect [2, 3] which include both electrolysis and gas loading experiments
[3-5] and also include experiments
involving deuterium-metals [2-5] and hydrogen-metals [1,6-9]. Theoretical
explanations of the Fleischmann-Pons effect
[2,3] and the low energy nuclear phenomena [2-5] have been described based
on the theory of Bose-Einstein
condensation nuclear fusion (BECNF) or theory of Boson cluster state
nuclear fusion (BCSNF), occurring in
micro/nano-scale traps/metal particles [10-24].
 In this paper, we describe the results of the earlier experimental work
[1] as well as the more recent results of
experiments with hydrogen-Nickel systems, including the observation of
generation of anomalously large magnetic field
(“super magnetic field”). After reporting the experimental results, we
describe theoretical analysis and reaction
mechanisms for the observed experimental results of hydrogen-Nickel systems
based on the BCSNF theory [10-24].



....snip....


8. Summary and Future Prospects
 Defkalion’s Hyperion R-5 reactor has been demonstrated to be a reliable
working device producing excess heat at
sufficiently high level with reliable control and high reproducibility for
further scientific investigations and for practical
applications. The experimental results obtained with the HyperionR-5
reactor are described in some details.
 For theoretical analysis of the experimental data generated by the
Hyperion R-5 reactor, the theory of the Boson
cluster state nuclear fusion (BCSNF) is used. The BCSNF is a generalization
of the optical theorem formulation to low
energy nuclear reactions occurring in deuterium/hydrogen loaded metal
systems.
 It is shown that the BCSNF theory is capable of explaining qualitatively
or quantitatively most of the experimental
results and observations reported from experiments with the Hyperion R-5
reactor. In particular, the observed timecorrelation
between the super magnetic field and the excess heat generations can be
explained by the BCSNF theory
involving nano-explosions (“Bosenova”), which create the super current and
the super magnetic field as well as the
excess power generation. The observed super magnetic field is a new
phenomenon and a new scientific discovery. It
opens up a possibility of direct conversion of excess heat generation to
electric power utilizing the super magnetic field.
 Defkalion has recently acquired new two on-line real-time mass
spectrometers [27] which will be integrated with
Hyperion R-6 reactors. These integrated experimental systems are expected
to generate the experimental data for the
reaction products which are urgently needed for theoretical and scientific
understanding of nuclear-reaction dynamics in
this emerging field.
 So far, the theoretical reaction-rate formulae, (Eq. (11), etc.) were
based on analytical solutions of the approximate
time-independent Schrödinger equations for many-body systems using the
Hartree-Fock theory with correlation effects.
This corresponds to time-independent non-liner (TINL) dynamics. Such
analytical formulae for reaction rates are
extremely useful for initial qualitative analysis of the experimental data.
For more quantitative analysis of
experimental data, we will need the time-dependent non-linear Schrödinger
equations for many-body systems (timedependent
non-linear (TDNL) dynamics).

On Tue, Jun 13, 2017 at 1:29 PM, Kevin O'Malley <kevmol...@gmail.com> wrote:

> And now, bringing Bosenovas back to BECs, LENR, Y.E. Kim
>
> http://www.physics.purdue.edu/people/faculty/yekim/ICCF-18-
> JCMNS-KH-Pre-1.pdf
>
> Här är några utdrag:
>
> Abstract*—Experimental results for anomalous heat effect and super
> magnetic field observed for hydrogen-Nickel systems are described.
> Theoretical analysis and reaction mechanisms are presented using theory of
> Boson cluster state nuclear fusion (BCSNF) based on *the optical theorem
> formulation. Observed excess heat generation and anomalously large magnetic
> field are explained by theoretical descriptions based on nano-scale
> explosions (“Bosenova”) and proton supper currents.
>
> …
>
> <http://www.sifferkoll.se/sifferkoll/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/defk.jpg>
>
> …
>
> Defkalion’s Hyperion R-5 reactor has been demonstrated to be a reliable
> working device producing excess heat at sufficiently high level with
> reliable control and high reproducibility for further scientific
> investigations and for practical applications. The experimental results
> obtained with the HyperionR-5 reactor are described in some details.
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jun 13, 2017 at 1:14 PM, Kevin O'Malley <kevmol...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Researchers have the bosenova blues
>>
>> A technique that brings the quantum world up to everyday sizeshas
>> physicists scratching their heads.
>>
>> Jeremy Thomson
>>
>>
>>
>> http://www.nature.com/news/2001/010319/full/news010322-3.html
>> [image: lbert Einstein postulated the existence of BECs in 1924]lbert
>> Einstein postulated the existence of BECs in 1924
>>
>> Some clusters of very cold atoms have physicists foxed, the American
>> Physical Society's March meeting heard this week in Seattle. Bose-Einstein
>> condensates, the bizarre form of matter that bridges the tiny, topsy-turvy
>> world of quantum mechanics and the everyday world, are pulling dramatic
>> tricks with which today's theories just can't cope.
>>
>> Ordinary matter comes in five forms. Three -- solids, liquids and gases
>> -- are familiar. The fourth, plasmas, are found in high-temperature systems
>> such as flames and fluorescent tubes. You could be forgiven for having
>> never heard of the fifth: the Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC).
>>
>> Christened in honour of Albert Einstein, who postulated their existence
>> in 1924 based on the work of Satyendra Bose, the first BECs were produced
>> by Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman at the University of Colorado in 1995.
>>
>> These curious entities never occur naturally, can exist only at
>> temperatures a few ten-billionths of a degree above absolute zero (-273
>> degrees Celsius) and until recently could contain only a few hundred atoms.
>> Even so, they fascinate physicists keen to deepen their understanding of
>> quantum phenomena.
>>
>> As an atom cools, it moves increasingly slowly, causing its wavefunction
>> (roughly speaking, the area in which it might be found) to grow.
>> Eventually, the wavefunctions from neighbouring atoms overlap and the whole
>> condensate starts to behave as a single quantum-mechanical object.
>>
>> It is hard to form a stable BEC of more than 100 atoms, and seeing what's
>> going on in condensates so small is very difficult. The recent discovery of
>> a particular mode in rubidium-85 called a 'Feshbach resonance' increased
>> the maximum condensate size to several tens of thousands of atoms -- but
>> only at just two billionths of a degree above absolute zero. "Damn cold by
>> anyone's standards," as Wieman says.
>>
>> Nonetheless, the new technique gave researchers a tool rather like a pair
>> of magnetic pliers to manipulate the condensates. Their results have them
>> scratching their heads.
>>
>> When compressed quickly enough, a condensate explodes, blasting off the
>> outer atoms and leaving a cold, collapsed remnant. The effect has been
>> dubbed a 'bosenova' because of its similarity to a supernova (an exploding
>> star).
>>
>> Unsurprisingly, the size of the remnant left when the condensate does a
>> bosenova depends on the energy of the explosion. But, strangely, the number
>> of atoms blasted off does not change. This is a real surprise, particularly
>> as researchers currently have no idea what happens to the remaining atoms.
>>
>> Unexplained jets have also been observed projecting from the mass of
>> atoms just before it collapses. And the more egg-shaped the initial
>> condensate (physicists call this anisotropic), the rounder the remnant --
>> entirely contrary to expectations. Charles W. Clark of the National
>> Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado, has even
>> observed curious smoke-ring formations within a BEC1
>> <http://www.nature.com/news/2001/010319/full/news010322-3.html#B1>.
>>
>> "These are not complicated crystals with many degrees of freedom and
>> complex interactions we are talking about; they are just atoms. We
>> understand atoms, right?" Wieman jokes. "Basic physics is missing to
>> explain these effects."
>>
>>    - References
>>       1. Anderson, B. P., Haljan, P. C., Regal, C. A., Feder, D. L.,
>>       Collins, L. A., Clark, C. W. & Cornell, E. A. Watching dark solitons 
>> decay
>>       into vortex rings in a Bose-Einstein condensate. *Physics Review
>>       Letters* (in press).
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Jun 13, 2017 at 1:10 PM, Kevin O'Malley <kevmol...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I like where this is headed, especially when looking at it in a 1
>>> dimensional viewpoint.
>>> The bosenova 'explosion' has been witnessed but no one really knows what
>>> caused it nor where the energy came from to drive all that matter away.
>>> Seems like 1 or 2 fusion events might be enough energy to do it.
>>>
>>>
>>> Atoms don't dance the 'Bose Nova'September 3, 2009
>>> [image: Atoms don't dance the 'Bose Nova']
>>> <https://3c1703fe8d.site.internapcdn.net/newman/gfx/news/hires/2009/tubes.jpg>
>>> With two laser beams the researchers generate an optical lattice, where
>>> the atoms are confined to vertical one-dimensional structures (red) with up
>>> to 15 atoms aligned in each tube.
>>>
>>> (PhysOrg.com) -- Hanns-Christoph Naegerl's research group at the
>>> Institute for Experimental Physics, Austria, has investigated how ultracold
>>> quantum gases behave in lower spatial dimensions. They successfully
>>> realized an exotic state, where, due to the laws of quantum mechanics,
>>> atoms align along a one-dimensional structure. A stable many-body phase
>>> with new quantum mechanical states is thereby produced even though the
>>> atoms are usually strongly attracted which would cause the system to
>>> collapse. The scientists report on their findings in the leading scientific
>>> journal *Science*.
>>>
>>> Interactions are considerably more drastic in low-dimensional systems
>>> than in three-dimensional ones. Thus, physicists take a special interest in
>>> these systems. In physics zero-dimensional quantum dots
>>> <https://phys.org/tags/quantum+dots/>, two-dimensional quantum wells
>>> and also one-dimensional quantum wires are known. The latter are spatial
>>> potential structures, where carriers can move only one-dimensionally.
>>>
>>> Whereas quantum dots and wells can be realized and analyzed relatively
>>> easily, it is much harder to investigate quantum wires in solid-state
>>> bodies. Hanns-Christoph Naegerl’s research group of the Institute for
>>> Experimental Physics of the University of Innsbruck has now tried something
>>> totally different: In a cloud of ultracold atoms they realized
>>> one-dimensional structures and thoroughly analyzed their properties.
>>>
>>> *Surprising observation*
>>>
>>> In a vacuum chamber <https://phys.org/tags/vacuum+chamber/> the
>>> physicists produced a Bose-Einstein condensate
>>> <https://phys.org/tags/bose+einstein+condensate/> with approx. 40,000
>>> ultracold cesium atoms. With two laser beams they generated an optical
>>> lattice, where the atoms were confined to vertical one-dimensional
>>> structures with up to 15 atoms aligned in each tube. The laser beams
>>> prevent the atoms from breaking ranks or changing place with each other.
>>> [image: Atoms don't dance the 'Bose Nova']
>>> <https://3c1703fe8d.site.internapcdn.net/newman/gfx/news/hires/2009/tubes_infinite_length.jpg>
>>> A stable many-body phase with new quantum mechanical states is produced
>>> (front) even though the atoms are usually strongly attracted which would
>>> cause the system to collapse (back).
>>>
>>> Using a magnetic field, the scientists could tune the interaction
>>> between the atoms: “By increasing the interaction energy between the atoms
>>> (attraction interaction), the atoms start coming together and the structure
>>> quickly decays,“ Naegerl explains what is called among experts the
>>> "Bosenova" effect.
>>>
>>> "By minimizing the interaction energy, the atoms repel each other
>>> (repulsive interaction), align vertically and regularly along a
>>> one-dimensional structure and the system is stable." If the interactions
>>> are switched from strongly repulsive to strongly attractive, a surprising
>>> effect can be observed. "We thereby achieve an exotic, gas-like phase,
>>> where the atoms are excited and correlated but do not come together and a
>>> 'Bosenova' effect is absent," Naegerl says. The phase was diagnosed by
>>> compressing the quantum gas and measuring its stiffness. "However, this
>>> excited many-body phase can only be realized by a detour via repulsive
>>> interaction. This phase was predicted four years ago and we have now been
>>> able to realize it experimentally for the first time," Elmar Haller says.
>>> He is first author of the research paper, which is now published in the
>>> renowned scientific journal *Science*. Currently, research on
>>> low-dimensional structures receives a lot of attention internationally and
>>> it may help to better understand the functioning of high-temperature
>>> superconductors.
>>>
>>> *Cold atoms as an ideal field of experimentation*
>>>
>>> "Ultracold quantum gases offer a big advantage: They can be isolated
>>> against the environment quite well," Naegerl explains. "Moreover, in our
>>> experiment we can practically rule out defects we often find in solid-state
>>> bodies." With this successful experiment the Innsbruck quantum physicists
>>> found an ideal experimental setup to further study the properties of
>>> quantum wires. Naegerl’s team of scientists clearly benefits from the long
>>> standing and successful research on ultracold atoms and molecules by
>>> another Innsbruck group of physicists: the research group led by
>>> Wittgenstein laureate Prof. Rudolf Grimm, which has already assumed a
>>> leading role internationally.
>>>
>>> In addition to producing the first Bose-Einstein condensates using
>>> cesium atoms and molecules, the scientists also observed exotic states such
>>> as the Efimov-state and repulsive quantum pairs experimentally for the
>>> first time worldwide. "The research work of Hanns-Christoph Naegerl and his
>>> team once more underlines the international significance of our research
>>> projects," Rudolf Grimm says.
>>>
>>> The experimental physicists of the research project on quantum wires
>>> also benefited from a very close cooperation with the theoretical
>>> physicists of the quantum physics stronghold in Innsbruck. The project of
>>> START-awardee Hanns-Christoph Naegerl is funded by the Austrian Science
>>> Funds and the European Union.
>>>
>>> *More information:* Realization of an Excited, Strongly-Correlated
>>> Quantum Gas Phase. Haller E, Gustavsson M, Mark MJ, Danzl JG, Hart R,
>>> Pupillo G, Nägerl HC. *Science *4. September 2009 (
>>> DOI:10.1126/science.1175850 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1175850>)
>>>
>>> Provided by University of Innsbruck
>>>
>>> On Tue, Jun 13, 2017 at 11:22 AM, bobcook39...@hotmail.com <
>>> bobcook39...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Kevin—
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Thanks for that instructive review.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> It seems that Storms was worried about a fast reaction of the BEC’s.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Ball lightening or Bosenovas may in fact be a reaction close to what
>>>> Storms was worried about in the thread of 2013 you have found.  The
>>>> following link addresses the possibility of bosenovas.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> https://www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2001/03/implosion-and-
>>>> explosion-bose-einstein-condensate-bosenova
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Various LENR researchers have witnessed what they report as bosenovas.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Bob Cook
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>

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