On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 9:55 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

> A spark produces a plasma, whenever a plasma cools as it must eventually
> do, at a minimum, it produces nanoparticles out of the vaporized electrode
> material that carried the spark..
>
***When a plasma COOLs????  That is utterly significant.  It is only under
"relatively cool" conditions that a BEC forms.  So when the plasma cools,
it forms a (linear) BEC, atoms come together and fuse sometimes and when
they do, by the nature of BECs, their output energy is dissipated by 1/N
the number of atoms involved in the BEC.

On top of that, the spark environment becomes a (linear) accelerator,
pushing particles such as protons straight into the opposing walls of the
crack of the metal matrix, thereby generating transmutations, fission,
nuclear heat from other products.  Perhaps it's even an asymmetrical thrust
capacitor, as described upthread.  Think about it: A v-shaped "crack" is
very similar to a capacitor in certain dimensions, and at the extremes of
those dimensions you'd see very different behavior.

Ed Storms wanted to move the discussion out from the interior of metal
hydrydes into the surface "where the laws of conservation of energy no
longer apply".  But cracks are a weak representation of "laws of Physics"
no longer applying:  The sparks ACROSS such cracks would be a perfect
candidate for "weird physics" and "laws of conservation of energy" no
longer applying, because plasma physics is incredibly weird to begin with.


> On Tue, Aug 5, 2014 at 12:24 AM, Kevin O'Malley <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sat, Aug 2, 2014 at 2:47 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/LochakGlowenergyn.pdf
>>>
>>> Here is what cavitation is producing.   These are what Ken Shoulders
>>> also produced in spark discharge. Sparks in water always produce
>>> cavitation. Only cavitation in water produces gamma because no BEC can
>>> be produced.
>>>
>> ***This strikes me as incredibly important because we've narrowed down
>> the focus of discussion to sparks, BECs, gamma ray production and LENR.
>> HOW is it that sparks in water always produce cavitation?  Can a linear BEC
>> form in gas simpler than in water?  Isn't it possible for a spark to form a
>> Luttinger Liquid linear BEC?  And consider the endpoints of such a
>> phenomenon:  at each end would be a few microns of solid Ni or Pd
>> encapsulating a linear formation of H or D atoms!  The reason it's so hard
>> to get our heads around it is that there are 2 kinds of phenomena
>> connecting to each other:  A 1dimensional Luttinger Liquid of atoms
>> embedded within a matrix connected to a BEC forming inside of a spark
>> across (Ed Storms's utterly important) crack or even just a "sphericule".
>> The TRANSITION between these 2 uncommon physical forms is completely beyond
>> our grasp to describe.
>>
>>
>>
>>> Sparks in a gas do not produce gamma because the spark produces
>>> nanoparticle aggregations  in which a BEC is carried.
>>>
>> ***Okay... where do these nanoparticle aggregations come from?  I've
>> never heard of them before.  What are they?
>>
>>
>>
>

Reply via email to