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How negative mass reacts to an applied force: [image: image.png] There is a lessen here to be learned by LENR engineering in general and more specifically for the Mizuno replicators. Air is a LENR poison. Polaritons on a metal surface will not form when exposed to nitrogen. Freedom from surface contamination on a LENR active metal surface must be perfect for the LENR reaction to occur. Any poison on that LENR surface will destroy the plasmonic reaction that brings forth polaritons. There is another lesson to be drawn here. Rossi loads his reactor with fuel. That fuel has polaritons based EVOs pre-formed on the surfaces of the fuel particles. This is the difference between a LENR reaction in which polariton EVOs form in parallel with LENR heat production as it begins and a reaction when the EVOs are produced and seeded before the reaction begins. Rossi can pre-load fuel into his reactor in the presence of air before reactor initiation with no ill effects to the LENR reaction, whereas Mizuno must completely purge his reactor of air before reaction startup. On Fri, Aug 2, 2019 at 5:16 PM Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote: > > > *https://physics.aps.org/articles/v12/88 > <https://physics.aps.org/articles/v12/88>Focus: Light Seems to Pull > Electrons Backward* > > > *Light hitting a metal surface at an angle sends the electrons moving in > the direction opposite to the light, a result that puzzles theorists.* > > The interaction of light with electrons will produce polaritons. > Polaritons have negative mass. The light gives electrons negative mass so > they move in the negative direction from the force imparted on them by the > light. > > But when the light interacts with air which is mostly nitrogen, polaritons > are not formed and the light imposes a force in which the electrons move in > the direction positive to the force imparted by the light. > > There is a lessen here to be learned by LENR engineering. Air is a LENR > poison. Polaritons on a metal surface will not form when exposed to > nitrogen. > > Freedom from surface contamination on a LENR active metal surface must be > perfect for the LENR reaction to occur. Any poison on that surface will > destroy the plasmonic reaction that brings forth polaritons. >

