The maximum temperature at which a BEC is sustained is directly related to the mass of the particle being condensed .
A SPP is almost massless (lighter than a neutrino) which implies a very high maximum temperature of condensation. On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 12:51 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote: > *From:* Kevin O'Malley > > > > What I call the Vibrating 1Dimensional Luttinger Liquid Bose-Einstein > Condensate , the V1DLLBEC. > > > > We gotta think up a better name, especially if it will include solids. > > > > One big problem with any BEC theory is that "One experimental fact is that > the observed reaction rate generally increases with temperature." > http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Cold_fusion/Theory > > Well that detail (reaction rate generally increasing with temperature) > would only be true of one (or a few) kinds of LENR and not every possible > kind. > > In fact there could be 3-4 distinct kinds of BEC-LENR as a subset of LENR > (which have been mentioned in the literature) and all four could be > different in the details. > > One or two of these varieties could be temperature limited. In fact the > temperature limited variety could be the easiest to prove, and if the > output can be engineered to be photon emission in the visible range, it > would possibly be valuable for alternative energy. > > Jones >