I think this is where Kevin got his theory! Even if he was not consciously aware of it.
J Jan 23, 2014 Quantum physics in 1-D: New experiment supports long-predicted 'Luttinger liquid' model http://phys.org/news/2014-01-quantum-physics-d-long-predicted-luttinger.html "In 1950, Japanese Nobel Prize winner Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, followed by American physicist Joaquin Mazdak Luttinger in 1963, came up with a mathematical model showing that the effects of one particle on all others in a one-dimensional line would be much greater than in two- or three-dimensional spaces. Among quantum physicists, this model came to be known as the "Luttinger liquid" state." -mark iverson From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Sunday, January 26, 2014 11:13 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: [Vo]:"energy driven superconductivity" and IR coherence for LENR Very interesting Kevin. This could be especially relevant if the tubes in question are shown to be a composite, made with graphite fibers, or CNT. The inside of a carbon nanotube would seem to favor a single line of dense hydrogen. The hydrogen may technically not need to be 1-D so much as to have an extreme ratio of length to diameter. From: Kevin O'Malley ***I have a theory to propose. It could be a one dimensional BEC rather than 3 dimensional. By that, I mean that there's a BEC forming along a single line of atoms (1dimensional), not along a plane (2dimensional) nor in a cube (3dimensional). So it's a partial BEC.

