Andrew and Jones—

I agree with you the Jurg’s model may be right on.  If not reviewed heretofore, 
Jurg’s paper/model of electrons/positrons is warranted.  An introduction to the 
mathematics Jurg uses, and how  that math relates to gauge theory invariance is 
pertinent, I,.e., SO(4) PHYSICS as Jurg refers to  it.

Andrew, do you have a reference to the ICCF-14 model you refer to in the 
comments to Jones?

Bob Cook

________________________________
From: Andrew Meulenberg <mules...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, May 6, 2019 8:41:57 AM
To: VORTEX; Andrew Meulenberg
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Planckian dissipation phenomenon

Dear Jones,

I suspect that it will take a convergence of ideas to solve the CF problem. I 
haven't the time, presently, to come up to speed on Jurg's model (I may have to 
make the time at some point).

I was unaware that spintronics can increase the effective mass of electrons. 
However, I suspect that is in the context of a lattice; if so, such an increase 
would not be surprising. Just as charged particles are trapped in the Van Allen 
belts by "mirroring" in the Earth's mag field gradient, this could happen to 
conduction electrons within a lattice. This would certainly add to the increase 
in effective mass from the E-field barriers of the lattice.

Right now, I am toying with Jean-Luc Paillet's concept of ~100 MeV relativistic 
electrons in deep orbits to act as muons and pions and a potential source of 
nuclear forces. As a consequence of deep-orbit interactions (e.g., spin-spin 
interaction between nucleons, quarks, and electrons), we may be able to 
understand the additional SS interactions, if a second such electron (or a 
positron) is present (as I suspect may be the case in the structure of neutrons 
- or even quarks).

I would not be surprised if Holmlid's work (and spintronics) can contribute to 
new (or, at least, modified) models of nuclear and atomic physics.

Andrew
_ _ _

On Mon, May 6, 2019 at 9:20 AM JonesBeene 
<jone...@pacbell.net<mailto:jone...@pacbell.net>> wrote:


From: Andrew Meulenberg<mailto:mules...@gmail.com>


  *   A possible weakness in the ICCF-14 model is the assumption that the 
increased effective mass of a lattice electron would be valid for 
atomic-hydrogen spacings (dimensions) below that of the lattice.

Andrew,

There is an interesting and possibly unplanned convergence of your thinking 
with that of Jürg Wyttenbach relative to electron effective mass and spin… 
which curiously also turns up at the basis of “spintronics”. Perhaps LENR will 
move in that direction. After all, the “effective mass” of electrons is a well 
studied detail in that context.

In the case of Holmlid -- and taken to the extreme (far extreme) - the large 
change in electron "effective mass" which can be engineered in spintronics may 
point to the origin of what Holmlid detects as “muons”. After all, the 
strongest objection to his work is the actual annihilation of hydrogen, 
supposedly into muons.

It may not be completely out of the question to suggest that he is somehow 
seeing the scattering of transitory remnants from massively increased 
(effective mass), rather than annihilation.

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