Such an experiment is not easily done. A fellow got a Nobel prize for that type of experiment not too long ago.
If you want me to build a polariton laser, that is over my head. Since you don't want to read about it, we might need to wait for Rossi's big reveal. On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 3:00 AM, Eric Walker <[email protected]> wrote: > On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 11:41 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote: > > What does a near-zero K temperature phenomenon have to do with LENR or the >> price of wheat? >> >> You are talking about a BEC of Rydberg atoms. That BEC is very heavy and >> can only happen at low temperatures. A BEC of Zero mass or near zero mass >> bosons can exist at vey high temperatures. So your inbreed assumptions are >> not correct. >> > > Although I'm skeptical about the BEC stuff, I'm not saying you're > incorrect on this one. I do think you have the burden of showing that such > a zero-mass or near-zero-mass BEC exists and is relevant to LENR. In order > to be convincing, I think you would need to come up with a simple, > cost-effective experiment that we can all agree is falsifiable and that > will establish your claim. It would not be enough to point to promising > articles on phys.org, as the starting points of such research are usually > too far removed from the kinds of systems we're interested in. > > Eric > >

