One of the key characteristics of the quantum world is that light and
matter can combine. This quantum electrodynamics (QED) condition is central
the transmission and reflection of light through a solid.

A photon can be absorbed by an electron and then reemitted.

The time that it takes for the electron to process a photon is called the
capture time.

The capture time of the photon is important to the LENR+ reaction because
while the photon and electron are combined, the electron becomes a boson
with spin of 1.

This enables the electron/photon pair to form a Bose-Einstein condensate
(BEC) because when the pair remains coupled the bosonic nature makes BEC’s
possible.

When paired, the photon also reduces the weight of the electron. This very
low weight enables BEC formation at very high temperatures.
Both the coupling time and strength can be substantially increased by
engineering optimal nanostructures.

One attempt at this engineering effort succeeded in increasing the coupling
strength by 16 times over the bulk condition.

>From the referenced paper:

“Additional surface passivation that preserves the polaritonic nature of
the excitations at small nanowire diameters allows us to push the observed
vacuum Rabi splitting to values of up to 200 meV in comparison to bulk
values of 82 meV. These results provide new avenues to achieve very high
coupling strengths (beyond bulk) potentially enabling application of
exciting phenomena such as Bose-Einstein condensation of polaritons,
efficient light-emitting diodes and lasers,”

Because one ev is translated to 10,000  K in temperature, this 200 meV
value corresponds to a maximum BEC temperature of 2000K.

Backup info for tis post can be found at

phys.org/pdf227265287.pdf

Lighten up: Polaritons with tunable
photon-exciton coherence

and

One-dimensional polaritons with size-tunable and enhanced coupling
strengths in semiconductor nanowires

www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/05/23/1102212108.full.pdf

or

www.pnas.org/content/108/25/10050.full

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