You could think of the compression mechanism not as causing fusion
directly, but causing the appearance of akito's symmetric condensate.


2013/5/16 Axil Axil <[email protected]>

> There is another compression mechanism that is important in
> Nanoplasmonics. The wavelength of light can be compressed by a factor of 10
> to the 8th power by a nanoantenna when a polariton is formed. Mark Stockmen
> explains it far better than me in his primer that I referenced up thread.
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 11:58 AM, Daniel Rocha <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Laser light can hardly compress anything in this case. Have you thought
>> about the wavelength of light of 500nm? A sphere with one node of it can
>> contain 125 billions of H atoms.
>>
>>
>> 2013/5/16 Axil Axil <[email protected]>
>>
>>> http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/13138/1/thesis.pdf
>>>
>>> This experimenter found not much alpha decay help from high powered
>>> lasers alone.
>>>
>>> Sorry, the screening comes from polariton production by laser stimuli of
>>> nano-particles.
>>> In the referenced I sited for you, the dissertation by Cort´es  states:
>>>
>>> “Lifetimes and α-particle emission spectra are investigated for a number
>>> of α-emitting nuclei. We find that even at strong intensities, the
>>> laser-induced acceleration of the α decay is negligible, ranging from a
>>> relative modification in the decay rate of 10−3 for static fields of
>>> electric field strengths of 10^^15 V/m, to 10−8 for strong optical fields
>>> with intensities of 1022 W/cm2, and to 10−6 for strong x-ray fields with
>>> laser intensities around 10^^24 W/cm2.”
>>>
>>> So it is not laser light alone. When laser light is amplified,
>>> compressed and concentrated by nanoantennas by a factor of 10 to the 9
>>> power for gold (reference has been provided) that is when the EMF is strong
>>> enough to be reactive.
>>>
>>> It is not just the EMF, but the sub-atomic quasiparticle formed from the
>>> combination of light and electrons called a poloriton that carries the
>>> electric negative charge that is concentrated is a sub-nanometer volume
>>> called a NAE.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 8:54 AM, Roarty, Francis X <
>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>>  Axil,****
>>>>
>>>>  thanks for the citation re decay acceleration, You are adding support
>>>> for relativistic effects in this environment, It does appear that
>>>> appropriate laser application multiplies the measured effect, I would posit
>>>> that it accelerates the medium transport through the geometry and
>>>> multiplies the number of gas atoms exposed to the changes in geometry. I
>>>> think plasmonic resonance is a reasonable description of what can occur
>>>> inside this geometry. ****
>>>>
>>>>                 In thinking about the Naudts paper re relativistic
>>>> hydrogen it occurred to me that perhaps we should view this effect from the
>>>> opposite direction..from the quantum foam level below the plank scale to
>>>> the quantum level where this geometry appears to allow the same sort of
>>>> breaks in time and  isotropy that occur at the quantum foam level [Cavity
>>>> QED] where tiny wormholes form to average out the fabric of space time
>>>> magnitudes of scale below the formation of physical building blocks…  I am
>>>> suggesting these tiny hot spots are  already normalized into chemistry
>>>> under the heading of catalytic action.. identified by surface areas and
>>>> figures of merit I would suggest said merit is actually based upon
>>>> conductivity, where we already know metals are best, and nano geometry. I
>>>> am positing that careful creation of geometry in a permanent inert gas
>>>> blanket  environment with permanent heat sinking could allow for a new
>>>> class of super catalysts where only small amounts of reactive gas is added
>>>>  and pumped through the system. Without these precautions we would classify
>>>> the reaction as pyrophoric.****
>>>>
>>>> Fran****
>>>>
>>>> ** **
>>>>
>>>> ****
>>>>
>>>>                 ****
>>>>
>>>> ** **
>>>>
>>>> *From:* Daniel Rocha [mailto:[email protected]]
>>>> *Sent:* Thursday, May 16, 2013 2:29 AM
>>>> *To:* John Milstone
>>>> *Subject:* EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:'Slow' arcing electrons can gain
>>>> relativistic mass****
>>>>
>>>> ** **
>>>>
>>>> Axil,****
>>>>
>>>> ** **
>>>>
>>>> I hope you just notice that the energy scale at which these phenomena
>>>> occur are puny in comparison to what is needed for fusion.****
>>>>
>>>> ** **
>>>>
>>>> 2013/5/16 Axil Axil <[email protected]>****
>>>>
>>>> Dear Ed:****
>>>>
>>>>  ****
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=2&cad=rja&ved=0CDQQFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.phy-astr.gsu.edu%2Fstockman%2Fdata%2FStockman_Phys_Today_2011_Physics_behind_Applications.pdf&ei=KWKUUd2bMe610AHSy4CQBQ&usg=AFQjCNHdcmFaRe9tfcLMzk1V8uwPQ8OvXA&sig2=BHsFSNJUGxJ8Cs9T3pBlJA&bvm=bv.46471029,d.dmQ
>>>> ****
>>>>
>>>>  ****
>>>>
>>>>  ****
>>>>
>>>> *A primer on Nanoplasmonics.*****
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> The concentration mechanism is a resonant constructive interference
>>>> process called Fano interference discovered a few years ago. It produces
>>>> the “hot spot”, which is the most significant and exciting process in
>>>> Nanoplasmonics.****
>>>>
>>>>  ****
>>>>
>>>> Much current research into hot spots is currently underway.****
>>>>
>>>> Laser light is used to produce dipole vibrations in the nanoparticles.
>>>> A Laser only produces plain waves and excites dipole excitation poorly.
>>>> ****
>>>>
>>>>  ****
>>>>
>>>> The lattice of a metal produces dipole vibrations in the deep infrared
>>>> far better than a laser ever can.****
>>>>
>>>>  ****
>>>>
>>>> The Ni/H reactor couples heat with surface electrons to produce
>>>> polaritons at high efficiency and then the nano-particles concentrate the
>>>> EMF in extreme concentrations.****
>>>>
>>>> ** **
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Daniel Rocha - RJ****
>>>>
>>>> [email protected]****
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Daniel Rocha - RJ
>> [email protected]
>>
>
>


-- 
Daniel Rocha - RJ
[email protected]

Reply via email to