Infrared photons are required to produce charge separation. That means that
low temperature *BEC *is not applicable. The temperature of the metal must
be high enough for the BEC to form.

Any atoms or combination will atoms will form Dipole based holes. I guess
that nickel makes forming dipoles easier than would other materials.

The role of hydrogen is dielectric enhancement between metal surfaces,
IMHO. I would be interested if helium might work also or is helium a LENR
poison?


On Tue, May 28, 2013 at 2:38 PM, David Roberson <dlrober...@aol.com> wrote:

> Axil,
>
> Please clarify something for me concerning BEC behavior.  Are you
> convinced that a BEC will always lead to fusion when it is formed?
>
> Would a BEC produced at near absolute zero be expected to fuse?  If not,
> what is the push required to make it happen?
>
> I assume we are speaking of a BEC composed of Ds, but would these behave
> differently than those made of Ps?
>
> Dave
>

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