This is interesting thinking.  The idea that angular momentum, linear
momentum, and energy are "conserved" is a hypothesis created and supported
(as I understand it) by observation, not by derivation based upon a
fundamental principle.  While it would be a violation of the hypothesis,
trading between these conserved quantities would not invalidate a
fundamental premise (am I correct?).

So, Bob, when you say, "Trading nuclear potential energy for metal lattice
electron orbital (thermal) angular momentum is LENR", what is the nuclear
potential energy that you are saying is being traded (exchanged) into the
electron orbital angular momentum?  What in the nucleus do you envision
being traded?

Clearly the nucleus is not as well understood as we imagine.  If you read
Norman Cook's book, "Models of the Atomic Nucleus", you will see the sorry
state of things.  Present models for the nucleus predict fission as
occurring in equal portions, but experiment shows that is far from the
case.  Even though we rely heavily on engineering of nuclear fission, the
models don't predict the characteristics of the reaction.  Could the
"smallness" of the constituents in the nucleus allow interaction with a
zero-point field, where at such small scales physics is different than we
know?  Could the trading of "conserved" quantities be commonplace at such
small scales?

On Sat, May 20, 2017 at 7:30 AM, bobcook39...@hotmail.com <
bobcook39...@hotmail.com> wrote:

> The following link contains interesting views on the subject of this
> thread.
>
>
>
> IMHO these are key LENR concepts.   Trading nuclear potential energy for
> metal lattice electron orbital (thermal) angular momentum is LENR.
>
>
>
> http://www.quantamagazine.org/the-quantum-thermodynamics-
> revolution-20170502/
>
>
>
> The following is excerpted from the article on thermodynamics:
>
>
>
> “Imagine a vast container, or reservoir, of particles that possess both
>
> energy and angular momentum (they’re both moving around and spinning).
>
> This reservoir is connected to both a weight, which takes energy to
>
> lift, and a turning turntable, which takes angular momentum to speed up
>
> or slow down. Normally, a single reservoir can’t do any work — this goes
>
> back to Carnot’s discovery about the need for hot and cold reservoirs.
>
> But the researchers found that a reservoir containing multiple conserved
>
> quantities follows different rules. “If you have two different physical
>
> quantities that are conserved, like energy and angular momentum,”
>
> Popescu said, “as long as you have a bath that contains both of them,
>
> then you can trade one for another.”
>
>
>
> In the hypothetical weight-reservoir-turntable system, the weight can be
>
> lifted as the turntable slows down, or, conversely, lowering the weight
>
> causes the turntable to spin faster. The researchers found that the
>
> quantum information describing the particles’ energy and spin states can
>
> act as a kind of currency that enables trading between the reservoir’s
>
> energy and angular momentum supplies. The notion that conserved
>
> quantities can be traded for one another in quantum systems is brand
>
> new. It may suggest the need for a more complete thermodynamic theory
>
> that would describe not only the flow of energy, but also the interplay
>
> between all the conserved quantities in the universe.
>
>
>
> The fact that energy has dominated the thermodynamics story up to now
>
> might be circumstantial rather than profound, Oppenheim said. Carnot and
>
> his successors might have developed a thermodynamic theory governing the
>
> flow of, say, angular momentum to go with their engine theory, if only
>
> there had been a need. “We have energy sources all around us that we
>
> want to extract and use,” Oppenheim said. “It happens to be the case
>
> that we don’t have big angular momentum heat baths around us. We don’t
>
> come across huge gyroscopes.”
>
>
>
> _”Popescu, who won a Dirac Medal last year for his insights in quantum
>
> information theory and quantum foundations, said he and his
>
> collaborators work by “pushing quantum mechanics into a corner,”
>
> gathering at a blackboard and reasoning their way to a new insight after
>
> which it’s easy to derive the associated equations. Some realizations
>
> are in the process of crystalizing. In one of several phone
>
> conversations in March, Popescu discussed a new thought experiment that
>
> illustrates a distinction between information and other conserved
>
> quantities — and indicates how symmetries in nature might set them apart.”
>
>
>
>
>


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