Bob--

What is your understanding of the energy transfer mechanism involved in the 
evanescent coupling (non-radiative) phenomena?

The ones we know about are vibrational lattice damping, spin coupling, spin 
orbit force coupling, electro-weak force coupling, gravitational coupling and 
maybe others unknown.  Some of these may be controlled more or less by the 
local magnetic field which change the parameters of allowed transitions as 
exist in a quantum system with its quantum energy states, whatever they may be 
at any instant particular instant in time.  

Bob  
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Bob Higgins 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2014 5:56 AM
  Subject: Re: [Vo]:Is Mizuno poining at Ryberg matter or not?


  Keep in mind that "Rydberg matter" does not normally describe "shrunken" 
hydrogen.  Shrunken hydrogen has its electron in a reduced orbital at an energy 
state below the normally accepted ground state.  This has been variously 
described as "inverse Rydberg" and "fractional Rydberg" or "hydrino" (Mills) 
states that are all below ground level.  Mills describes multiple fractional 
states below ground level.  There is an older reference to a Deep Dirac Level 
or DDL that is also a shrunken hydrogen.


  Most normal hydrogen states, including the normal (non-fractional) Rydberg 
states are entered and departed via emission/absorbtion of a photon of the 
correct energy level.  Transitions to fractional Rydberg states (below normal 
ground level) can only achieved by evanescent coupling (non-radiative) to the 
atom according to Mills.  Incontrovertible evidence for the fractional states 
has never been provided, though Mills makes a pretty good case.  It may turn 
out that LENR could prove the existence of these fractional states.


  I will leave it to the more skilled theorists to say whether the shrunken 
states (fractional Rydberg) of hydrogen are implicated in LENR - but to me, the 
possibility does seem compelling.  In Dr. Storms' theory, when his hydroton is 
formed in the NAE (crack), he describes the hydroton as removing the energy in 
the hydrogen atom before it fuses such that there is little energy remaining to 
be released when the fusion occurs.  One way to successively remove the energy 
in such a hydroton configuration may be the progressive conversion to an ever 
more fractional state, and when Mills' minimum size of 1/137 is reached, fusion 
occurs.  The hydroton configuration could provide the evanescent coupling 
needed to take the H to fractional levels.


  Bob Higgins




  On Tue, Apr 8, 2014 at 5:47 AM, Teslaalset <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    Recent positive responses to Mizuno's work present recently at MIT by 
Yoshino made me look at his work presented at ICCF 18 last year. 
    In section 1.1 of this presentation Mizuno hints in my view at Rydberg 
matter but does not actually mention Rydberg. 
    Bullet #4 and #5 indicates he thinks some involved atoms schrink in size 
and in bullet #10 he indicates that alkali and alkaline-earth elements show 
identical effects. 


    Looking to general description of Rydberg atoms, it is indicated that 
Rydberg atoms are extremely large with loosely bound valence electrons.


    Any opinions on these observations/assumptions?
      





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