Yes, huge charge screening causes LENR, but the issue is how that screening comes about. The concentration of a large amount of electrons is made difficult by the Pauli Exclusion Principle. The fermionic nature of the electrons puts a cap on the number of electrons that can be packed into a limited volume.
This is why I favor the polariton to accumulate enough charge because it is a boson and is not limited by the Pauli Exclusion Principle. All the polariton fall into the lowest energy state and condense. The electron does not need to react with the nucleus. The intense screening can directly affect the nuclear protons and pions to allow a proton to get close enough for the strong force to bring the proton into the nucleus. Fission and alpha decay needs to be accounted for. Remember back when Rossi revealed to the two Swedes that 10% of his ash content was iron. This is due to accelerated alpha decay of nickel due to coulomb barrier lowering since Fe = Ni - Alpha On Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 1:39 AM, Chuck Sites <[email protected]> wrote: > For what Daniel, the Axil nano-antenna + e + photon = BEC or my raisin in > a charged pudding model that creates a tightly shrunken electron orbital > radius for the H s(n=1) quantum state that creates a virtual neutron? > > I misspelled hydrino as hydro earlier, I hope everyone recognizes that > this is not the same as a hydrino. The hydrinos are supposedly H atoms > where the the quantum state exists at below the s-wave. What I'm > suggesting is that in an electric field like the background of charge of > the electrons in a metal will reduce the orbital radii of an H in that > metal. That effect is seen in Rydberg atoms in an electric field. I see > no difference here. > > So in some metals, there is no reason NOT to think that "virtual neutrons" > are common. They are just highly screened protons that can penetrate into > the nuclei of host lattice metal with a large enough cross section. > > > > > > > On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 7:49 PM, Daniel Rocha <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Do you have a mathematical model that shows this as evidence? >> >> 2013/4/29 Axil Axil <[email protected]> >> >>> >>> >>> >>> . It immediately forms a Bose-Einstein condensate which can thermalize >>> emitted gamma rays from the nuclear reaction. >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >> Daniel Rocha - RJ >> [email protected] >> > >

