Oops .. the second paragraph was original draft but since I forgot to delete it 
will have to expand on where it was headed literally further down the temporal 
rabbit hole..
What IF... the narrowest regions of Casimir geometry are the opposite of an 
event horizon where instead of time coming to a near standstill from our 
perspective it instead beats along at epochs at a time for every second from 
our perspective? The question I posit is what happens to the photons being 
emitted from spontaneous emission - as they climb the stretched fabric of space 
time out of the Casimir/relativistic well do they pile up?




RE: [Vo]:Ahern's ILENRS-12 Presentation - "Energy Localization"

Roarty, Francis X
Thu, 06 Sep 2012 11:03:59 -0700

On  Wednesday, September 05, 2012 4:43 PM Jones Beene said [snip] However, it

is during a local excursion that a secondary reaction can occur,

which does indeed violate CoE, to the extent it is gainful in itself.[/snip]

Agreed, and nature being what it is you would also expect an equal loss for

excursions in the opposite direction where reactions that should have occurred

at nominal are instead delayed. My posit being that Casimir geometry and

lattices perform double duty when gas atoms are introduced, In addition to

segregating the pressure / breaking the isotropy they also confine the gas

molecules in a biased manner to one of these segregated regions as compared to

the other. I think this is why we have claims of both accelerated radioactive

decay and delayed radioactive decay based on the gas and metals used.

Fran





performing double duty by scaling and segregating these normally unexploitable

forces from below the Planck scale and also exhibiting confinement properties

toward diffusing gas molecules such that reactions occurring in these balanced

zones do not simply cancel out. I sometimes wonder if time dilation introduces

another option to the standard mass to energy consideration where energy is

obtained via accelerated aging of the gas atoms? Would the spontaneous

emissions of an atom over an epoch be able to pile up on a temporally

Fran



-----Original Message-----

From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]]

Sent: Wednesday, September 05, 2012 4:43 PM

To: [email protected]

Subject: EXTERNAL: RE: [Vo]:Ahern's ILENRS-12 Presentation - "Energy

Localization"



Ahern under-emphasizes the "super-radiance" and "sub-radiance" balance in

this paper. If he had made DPSR clear, then there is no primary violation.



DPSR - Dicke-Preparata super-radiance - proposes that certain spatial areas

can undergo intense semi-coherent energy excursions (localized energy

extremes) which are nominally perfectly balanced against adjoining areas,

where kinetics are correspondingly muted. At this primary level there is no

gain.



However, it is during a local excursion that a secondary reaction can occur,

which does indeed violate CoE, to the extent it is gainful in itself.





-----Original Message-----

From: [email protected]



His example of spring coupled point masses seems to circumvent the 2nd Law

of Thermodynamics, by focusing rather than diffusing kinetic energy.



As in endothermic chemical reactions, this is (probably) just an apparent

violation of the 2nd Law, except occurring at nuclear/particle scales.





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