Can the large reported presence of Fe be covered by your explanation? Rust 
replacing graphite?
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Axil Axil 
  To: vortex-l 
  Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2011 12:09 AM
  Subject: [Vo]:Revised and extended Rydburg ion conjecture


  This revised and extended description of the Rydburg ion conjecture is my 
best efforts to explain the detailed mechanism consistent with all know facts 
as revealed by Rossi.





  In the Rossi reactor, I believe that clusters of coherent and entangled 
Rydburg hydrogen condensate crystals are formed on the surface of a solid such 
as graphite.  Such ions attain a long average lifetime due to the high pressure 
and temperatures maintained within the hydrogen envelope of the reaction 
vessel. This long lifetime is sufficient to permit the ions to drift across the 
hydrogen envelope. Once they reach the nickel oxide nano-powder affixed to the 
reaction vessel walls, a hybrid hydride reaction occurs with the highly the 
eroded nickel oxide surface layer.





  An alkaline metal with an electric low work function can catalyze the Rydburg 
cluster emissions especially from the surface of a carbon solid.





  In more detail, the formation of Rydburg hydrogen is most easily formed from 
the surfaces of carbon or metal oxides. These planar clusters have six-fold 
symmetry and contain 7, 19, 37, 61, or 91 atoms. These numbers are the so 
called magic numbers for closed-pack clusters.





  Under the assumption that the fusion of these variously sized Rydburg 
clusters is at the bottom of the Rossi reaction, this distribution in the 
number of protons based on Rydburg magic number could be the mechanism that 
produces the various light elements found in the nuclear ash of the Rossi 
reactor.





  In these Rydburg clusters, the electrons provide the main structure in which 
the ions are moving. The ion cores are embedded in a sea of electrons which 
shield the ions from each other as in an ordinary metal. 





  Because they are quantum mechanically entangled, these multi-atom crystals of 
hydrogen behave as a single atom. These clusters are very long lived and grow 
increasingly ionized by atomic and electron impacts that come from the high 
pressure and temperature of the hydrogen envelope. 





  More generally, these clusters behave and in fact mimic negatively charged 
hydrogen ions with sufficiently long lifetimes to enter into the lattice 
defects.





  These defects have been produced by hydrogen erosion of the nickel oxide 
nano-powder when the hydrogen gas was first loaded into the reaction chamber at 
reactor startup.





  After this adsorption step, these complex H- ions interact with the nickel 
atoms that form the walls of the lattice defect. It is possible that a number 
of these complex H- ions can be confined in the nickel lattice defect. In 
accordance with the Pauli Exclusion Principle and with the Heisenberg 
uncertainty principle, the conditions are created for replacing electrons of 
the nickel metal atoms with these complex entangled assemblages of hydrogen 
atoms, thereby forming metal-hydrogen complex atomic formations.



  So at the end of this absorption process, these complex H- ions are adsorbed 
into the lattice interstices, but adsorption at the grain edges, by trapping 
the negatively charged Rydburg ions into the lattice defects; replacement of an 
atom of the nickel metal lattice holes may also occur.



  This event can take place due to the fermion nature of these complex Rydburg 
H- ion; however, since H- ions have a very large composite atomic mass many 
times larger than an electron mass, they tend to penetrate very deeply into the 
nickel lattice structure of the nickel oxide nano-powder, and cause an emission 
of Auger electrons and of X rays. 



  Thermal oscillations in the metal lattice tend to compress the large number 
of highly compacted hydrogen atoms which comprise the Rydburg-ion(s) causing a 
structural reorganization of subatomic particles and freeing energy by mass 
defect; a fraction of the protons of this assemblage of sequestered hydrogen 
atoms will carry this fusion reaction energy which  expels them from the local 
of the reaction as individual protons, and can generate secondary nuclear 
reactions within immediately adjacent neighboring metal cores.



  To reiterate in more  detail, the complex entangled super atom that has been 
formed by the metal atom capturing the Rydburg H- ion, in the full respect of 
the energy conservation principle, of the Pauli exclusion principle, and of the 
Heisenberg uncertainty principle, is forced towards an excited status, and 
reorganizes itself by the migration of the Rydburg - ion towards deeper 
orbitals or levels, i.e. towards a minimum energy state, thus emitting Auger 
electrons and X rays during the level changes. The Rydburg - ion falls into a 
potential hole and concentrates the kinetic energy which was previously 
distributed evenly over the entire entangled volume of the entire Rydburg 
hydrogen crystal into a smaller volume whose radius is about 5x10e-15 m. 



  This results in the fusion of the constituent hydrogen atoms into various 
light elements which form a light atomic weight ash and whose feedstock is 
solely hydrogen atoms. The secondary fusion process generates copper atoms 
whose feed stock is nickel atoms and protons expelled from the site of initial 
light element fusion during light element formation.



  The total Rydburg-ion mass is thousands of times more massive than the 
electron. This large mass and associated large negative charge effectively 
shields and reduces the electromagnetic resistance between the ion and the 
nickel core. This rapidly draws these two bodies much closer into a covalent 
bond than an electron can. The effective radius of the modified hydrogen is 
correspondingly smaller than a normal hydrogen atom. Because the nuclei are so 
close, the strong nuclear force is able to kick in and bind all constituent 
nuclei together.



  So at the end of this process, the Rydburg-ion is at a distance from the core 
that is comparable with the nuclear radius; in fact, in the fundamental status 
of the complex atom that is formed by adding the Rydburg- ion, due to its large 
mass that is far greater than the mass of the electron, the Rydburg - ion is 
forced to stay at such deep levels at a distance from the core that is 
comparable with the nuclear radius, in accordance with Bohr radius calculation. 



  As explained above, owing to the short distance from the core, a process is 
triggered in which the hydrogen atoms that comprises the Rydburg - ion are 
fused into heavier elements and oftentimes expel constituent excess protons 
that are subsequently captured by the cores of the nickel atoms that form the 
surrounding lattice defect walls, with a structural reorganization and energy 
released by mass defect, similarly to what happens in the case of electron 
capture with structural reorganization and energy released by mass defect or in 
case of the loss of two electrons, due to their intrinsic instability, during 
the fall process towards the lowest layers, and eventually an expulsion of 
protons and nuclear reorganization reactions can occur with other neighboring 
nickel atom cores, said reactions detected as transmutations to the active core 
after the production of energy.



  This multi-leveled transmutation process accounts for the production of both 
the wide spectrum of light elements and a variety of heavy elements including 
copper and zinc. 



  Rossi can only explain the production of copper as a proton fusion reaction 
but cannot account for the prolific production of many and various light 
elements. 



  A compound negative particle complex of varied mass comprised of many 
hydrogen atoms is required to explain the production of many light elements in 
the Rossi ash besides copper as follows: 





  8   - Oxygen (component of nickel oxide)

  9   - Fluorine (captured to form fluorides)

  10 - Neon (outgased ?)

  11 – Sodium (possible graphite catalyst)

  12 - Magnesium

  13 - Silicon (mentioned as ash)

  14 – Phosphorus (possible graphite catalyst)

  15 – Sulfur (mentioned as ash)

  16 – Chlorine (mentioned as ash)

  17 – Argon (outgased ?)

  18 – Potassium (mentioned as ash) (possible graphite catalyst)

  19 – Calcium (mentioned as ash)



  Whereas the limited explanation of a single proton/nickel fusion will have 
only produced copper as stated by Rossi.


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