Maybe.

Who can do the math on quantum black holes, though?
Daunting.

ChemE Stewart wrote:
> I think lightning is the discharge from the buildup of charge in the
> atmosphere created from the surface LENR of orbital quantum micro black
> holes of entropy and the cooling & condensing, rain and snow is triggered
> as they extract entropy from the surrounding gaseous atmosphere along cold
> fronts and such.
>
> It is just vacuum energy and we live in a very non smooth spacetime, even
> on Earth.
>
> Stewart
> Darkmattersalot.com
>
> On Saturday, March 16, 2013, wrote:
>
>> Yes. There are a number of papers proposing a counter-intuitive
>> environment-to-system heat energy concentration based on non-thermal
>> entropy exchanges (e.g. from spin baths) and/or taylored quantum
>> measurement wavefunction collapses.
>>
>> Also, the anomalous effects surrounding lightning may be relevant:
>>
>> Lightning strikes produce free neutrons, and we’re not sure how -
>> Low energy neutrons not due to cosmic rays or any other previously
>> known source.
>> http://arstechnica.com/science/2012/03/nuclear-lightening/
>>
>> Observation of thundercloud-related gamma rays and neutrons in Tibet
>> http://arxiv.org/pdf/1204.2578.pdf
>>
>> -- Lou Pagnucco
>>
>> Jones Beene wrote:
>> > Well, it would not be nonsense if there was gain from the zero point
>> > field.
>> >
>> > That kind of gain is expected to carry ambient heat with it - with the
>> > side
>> > effect of cooling the surroundings.
>> >
>> > From: James Bowery
>> >
>> > Well, of course he would retract the nonsense about ambient energy.
>> >
>> > [...]
>>
>>
>


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