Or possibly the meniscus of bubble systems where gas bubbles becomes a plasma 
and boundary regions are compressed by a steady sonar tone that can be 
modulated on and off rapidly. A boundary doesn't have to be a perfect conductor 
and the dynamic range of a resistive liquid meniscus boundary may well trump 
the slower transitions of a conductive metal relative to moving gas atoms -both 
relate to DCE but this begs another question, which is more important to the 
robust effect, the nano geometry or the CHANGE in nano geometry?

From: Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 13, 2014 9:54 PM
To: vortex-l
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Resonant photons for CNT ring current

Most LENR researchers use static NAE in their systems. Examples of static NAE 
are those cracks produced hydrogen loading.

When NAE hot spots are produced through a dynamic mechanism as they are 
required to keep the reaction going. NAE destruction does not kill the reaction 
over time. In a dynamic NAE system, NAE creation exactly matches NAE 
destruction.

In more advanced systems capable of producing NAEs as an ongoing process, 
computer automation control can signal when NAEs are reduced in numbers below 
reaction specification and a activation of a plasma based dust production 
process rebuilds the NAE population.

Think of NAE's as lumps of coal fed into a coal fire by a temperature 
controlled stoker. Lowering temperatures cause a thermostatic process to fed 
more coal lumps into the coal fire.

Such a dynamic NAE system can run for years without degradation in performance.

On Thu, Mar 13, 2014 at 9:36 PM, Kevin O'Malley 
<kevmol...@gmail.com<mailto:kevmol...@gmail.com>> wrote:
It strikes me that as so many LENR researchers tried to scale up their results, 
they have failed.  That would seem to suggest that higher temperatures kill the 
LENR effect, which favors BEC formation theories.  \\\





On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 11:44 AM, Kevin O'Malley 
<kevmol...@gmail.com<mailto:kevmol...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Jones:
Using your later input, how about the 1DLEC, pronounced OneDellECK.
1 Dimensional Luttinger Electron Condensate


On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 9:51 AM, Jones Beene 
<jone...@pacbell.net<mailto: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.





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