...I am torn between Axil’s posit that the hydrogen atoms form a bose condensate ...
The condensate is made of bosons comprised of a tightly bound single waveform of light and electron waves of equal energy. Extreme density of these bosons provide high temperature condensation. On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 7:08 AM, Roarty, Francis X <[email protected] > wrote: > Yes, but I am torn between Axil’s posit that the hydrogen atoms form a > bose condensate and equally thermalize and this posit by Bob that the sites > are discrete pockets contained by zirconia dielectric.. are these 2 posits > as conflicted as they appear or perhaps this is a matter of scale where the > condensate occurs only in the pockets. My preference for the suppression of > virtual particles via geometry makes me suspect that the condensate must be > present because it also opens the possibility of ZPE as the bootstrap > mechanism which divides these materials from the same materials at larger > dimensions. > > Fran > > > > *From:* Eric Walker [mailto:[email protected]] > *Sent:* Wednesday, October 08, 2014 1:25 AM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Zirconia? > > > > On Tue, Oct 7, 2014 at 8:01 AM, Bob Higgins <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > Zirconia would not, itself, be a catalyst. I specifically mentioned > zirconium - the metal. > > > > I thought your description of how you're using zirconium was interesting. > My comments related to the way George Miley is using it, in an article > Jones linked to. > > > > In the case of zeolites, I understand that the zeolite material is not > LENR active itself. > > > > Makes sense. I was thinking of zeolites and zirconium dioxide, which are > dielectrics, along the lines of providing a matrix within which conductive > active sites are contained and electrically insulated from one another (in > the manner of your description of zeolites). My hunch is that the > electrical insulation will make it possible for higher potentials to arise > between conductive grains than would be the case if the entire substrate > were freely conductive. If the potential were high enough, I'm thinking > there would be arcing. No doubt there would need to be something above and > beyond the zeolite or zirconium dioxide substrate to set up the potential. > > > > Eric > > >

