The J.S.Brown paper also says the following which is, I gather, pertinent to 
LENR (obvious understatement):
 
"It is hence reasonable to suppose that, once coherence has been established, 
the height and width of the effective Coulomb barrier between neighbouring s, p 
state pairs is reduced, with a concommitant increase in the - normally 
infinitesimally slow - D-D fusion rate."
 
and their calculations show that the rate of fusion increases by an order of 
magnitude...
 
"At |r1 −r2| = 0.06°A, the amplitude was enhanced by about an order of 
magnitude over the simple product state that pertains when interaction is 
neglected." 
 
One other interesting statement is:
 
"The existence of a low temperature phase in which all the deuterons cohere in 
a mesoscopically entangled state is hence strongly indicated."
 
With all that is going on recently, I think we are all witnessing the birth of 
a new chapter in Physics... the baby is crowning!!  And some of you are helping 
to birth this baby!!  This is truly an exciting time...

-Mark

  _____  

From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 7:39 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Vo]: Comment on Rossi website of interest to theorists...



Damn! What a coincidence.

 

I was just reading the Brown article. 

 

I think he’s got it almost cracked - Dipole attraction exactly cancels monopole 
repulsion at very short H-H distances.

 

A must-read !

 

Jones

 

 

From: Mark Iverson [

----------  Comment 2 ----------------------------

Julian Brown 
January 27th, 2011 at 12:32 PM 

 

Congratulations Mr Rossi. You may have saved the planet.

 

The anomaly has a relatively simple explanation:

 

Effective potential for H in Ni and Pd is very flat because of surrounding 
countercharge, so ground state of H has gaussian width of about 0.3 Angstrom.

 

h-omega transition to 1st excited state in harmonic well is about 50 meV (8 
THz).

 

This frequency is not attenuated over lattice cell dimensions, so transitions 
are unscreened.

 

Ground->excited —- exited->ground interaction between neighbours causes first 
excited doublet of two H to mix into bonding and anti-bonding states.

 

Splitting, large because of 0.3A width, may be greater than h-omega, so bonding 
state is actually true ground state.

 

Dipole attraction exactly cancels monopole repulsion at very short H-H 
distances.

 

Gaussian tail from neighbouring cell can overlap with other H without any 
exponential die-off, resulting in nuclear contact and some sort of p+p reaction.

 

Multisite coherence forbids emission of short wave quanta, so normal n,p, gamma 
channels are forbidden.

 

See http://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0703715 for the details.

--------------------------------------------

 

Here is the abstract for the arXiv doc:

 

H-H dipole interactions in fcc metals
J.S.Brown
(Submitted on 27 Mar 2007 (v1), last revised 12 Apr 2007 (this version, v4))
It is observed that interstitial hydrogen nucleii on a metallic lattice are 
strongly coupled to their near neighbours by the unscreened electromagnetic 
field mediating transitions between low-lying states. It is shown that the 
dominant interaction is of dipole-dipole character. By means of numerical 
calculations based upon published data, it is then shown that in stoichiometric 
PdD, in which essentially all interstitial sites are occupied by a deuteron, 
certain specific superpositions of many-site product states exist that are 
lower in energy than the single-site ground state, suggesting the existence of 
a new low temperature phase. Finally, the modified behaviour of the 
two-particle wavefunction at small separations is investigated and prelimary 
results suggesting a radical narrowing of the effective Coulomb barrier are 
presented.

 

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