http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MosierBossinvestigat.pdf

INVESTIGATION OF NANO-NUCLEAR REACTIONS IN
CONDENSED MATTER
FINAL REPORT
Dr. Pamela A. Mosier-Boss
SPAWAR Systems Center Pacific
San Diego, CA 92152



Quote
... Besides LENR, the Pd/H(D) system exhibits superconductivity. Palladium
itself does not superconduct. However, it was found that H(D)/Pd does and
that the critical temperatures of the deuteride are about 2.5 K higher than
those of hydride (at the same atomic ratios). 19 This is the 'inverse’
isotope effect. In these early measurements, the loading of H(D) in the Pd
lattice was less than unity, i.e. H(D):Pd < 1. Later Tripodi et al. 20
developed a method of loading and stabilizing 50 µm diameter Pd wires with
H(D):Pd loadings greater than one. These samples have exhibited near room
temperature superconductivity. Examples of measured superconducting
transitions of PdH x samples are shown in Figure 1-2.



We believe the two phenomena, LENR and high T c superconductivity, are
related and that both need to be investigated in order to gain an
understanding of the processes occurring inside the Pd lattice.

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Another important factor is how topological states provide an ability of a
material to "delocalized electrons". This means that the electron can be
broken apart into its basic characteristics: location. charge, and spin.
The spin parts (Spinons) of many electrons can come together into a
magnetic structures (a magnon condensate) that can move around independent
of the electrons that the spins originally came from. These balls of spin
comprise the plasmoids that produce strange radiation.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinon

On Thu, Jul 4, 2019 at 8:56 AM JonesBeene <[email protected]> wrote:

> Could the mechanical application of palladium to nickel  be one of  these
> new topologies?
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> https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-02062-0?WT.ec
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> If so, then well-known computer chip processing such as  nano lithography
> could offer improvements ... and/or standardization.
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> According to the geniuses at Nature, “Exotic topological states of matter”
> — have shot from rare curiosity to one of the hottest fields in physics.
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