Axil,
                Although I was aware that alkali metals like calcium can form 
Casimir geometry I missed the fact that Rydberg hydrogen could also take this 
form in your previous mentions of Rydberg matter and it could be an important 
missing piece if true.. it certainly trumps the Mills theory that individual  
hydrogen atoms can be self catalyzing because what you are suggesting with 
hydrogen metal  is that the micro and nano cavities where this type of metal 
hydrogen  is originally formed can now further suppress the vacuum wavelengths  
by subdividing the original cavities down into even smaller cavities that any 
still free motion gas atoms could load into, migrate thru a tapestry of higher 
suppression values and interact with other atoms in the same region.
Fran

From: Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2013 3:28 PM
To: vortex-l
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Dynamic creation of NHE hypothesis


I have talked about Rydberg mater very often here at vortex.
Hydrogen can form Rydberg matter. It is the SOLID form of clustered hydrogen. 
This hydrogen cluster is actually a alkali metal.

Yes, hydrogen can form into nano-particles.

These hydrogen nano-particles behave just like nickel nano-particles.

Hydrogen nano-particles form dipoles and polaritons that are the fundamental 
cause of the LENR reaction.
Jed said:

Presumably the NAE is not made in exactly the same place in the same material 
where it previously had been destroyed.
Perhaps it is, the way tungsten is redeposited in some incandescent lights.

Axil responds:

These hydrogen nano-particles form and are destroyed in a constant cycle. The 
same is true for potassium that is the "secret sauce" added to amplify the LENR 
reaction by created a wider size mix of nano and micro particle sizes.



On Tue, May 21, 2013 at 2:21 PM, Jed Rothwell 
<jedrothw...@gmail.com<mailto:jedrothw...@gmail.com>> wrote:
These conversations are getting all mixed up. Let me start a new thread for 
this one.
Edmund Storms <stor...@ix.netcom.com<mailto:stor...@ix.netcom.com>> wrote:

In addition, the formation and destruction process must remain in balance 
because otherwise the process will stop once all the NAE are destroyed.

It they do not stay in balance, the reaction will fluctuate, getting stronger 
and weaker, finally petering out. Right? Cold fusion reactions often do that.


Presumably the NAE is not made in exactly the same place in the same material 
where it previously had been destroyed.

Perhaps it is, the way tungsten is redeposited in some incandescent lights.


 If what you say is true, the CF process will not be useful because it will not 
last very long.

Perhaps it will not last very long, and it will not be useful. Rossi ran a 
reactor for a year, but there is no telling how much powder it had in it, or 
how much longer it might have run.

We hope it will run indefinitely. But there is no proof of that yet as far as I 
know.

- Jed


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