This paper verifies that a photon eradiated Bose-Einstein condensate will cut the frequency of incoming photons by dividing that frequency between N numbers of atoms. ***So if one assumes a gamma ray is emitted by a BEC cold fusion event, eventually one could go backwards and measure the frequency generated to see how many atoms formed the BEC, right? And the average frequency would give us the average # of atoms per BEC. I wonder if anyone has ever measured emitted frequencies of LENR experiments.
On Mon, May 27, 2013 at 12:49 AM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote: > This paper verifies that a photon eradiated Bose-Einstein condensate will > cut the frequency of incoming photons by dividing that frequency between N > numbers of atoms. > > > > http://arxiv.org/pdf/1203.1261v1.pdf > > > > Rydberg excitation of a Bose-Einstein condensate > > > > “The results of theoretical simulations are represented by the > continuous lines. > > > > According to the super-atom picture the collective Rabi frequency for the > coherent excitation of N atoms is > > > > frequency (collective) = square root(number of atoms) X frequency(single); > > > > Where the single-particle Rabi frequency (single) is app 2 pi x 200 kHz > for our experimental parameters.” >