Jones, are you suggesting that particles inside a CNT can exist at a lower 
temperature than those outside?  That is an interesting question.  I would 
initially think that this would violate thermodynamic laws, but strange things 
do happen.   Have you seen any reference to this type of behavior and how would 
it be measured?

Dave

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Jones Beene <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Mar 4, 2014 10:20 am
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Resonant photons for CNT ring current




From:MarkI-ZeroPoint 
 
http://www.ece.umd.edu/~antonsen/Data/IRMMW-THz%202013/Extended%20Abstracts/2013-09-03-Tu/TU12-6.pdf

 
Thanks for posting that reference.  And I might draw yourattention to my 
posting a few mins ago… “Of Metronomes andMolecules...” Once again, we find 
ourselves bumpinginto each other down in this rabbit hole…  ;-)

Yes, looks like there is anemergent meme within the vortices of cyberspace 
which we are tuned into thisweek … another angle on the metronome effect would 
a new kind of phononcooling (as in laser cooling). 
BTW – if in a nanotubeexperiment - there does exist a “virtual rabbit hole” for 
“virtualcooling” in which bosons at high temperature can condense, then 
theinside diameter of the CNT could be such a space. A Cooper pair of electrons 
isa composite boson. 
Thus there could be a hybrid ortwo step regime for LENR which is based on 
electron acceleration, via CNTentrapment. (not to mention other possibilities).
 


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