What do you think of my proposal of a 2-stage LENR theory? First stage, the 1DLEC. As previously discussed. https://www.mail-archive.com/*vortex*-l...@eskimo.com/msg91418.html
2nd stage, RPF The first stage generates some fusion events, and then RPF gets triggered. RPF is nature's way of trying to get back to equilibrium, even if it means shedding mass down to a partial hydrogen. This explains why the effect is so hard to initiate, also why it's so hard to scale up (the BEC won't form at higher temperatures), and why the whole thing is so baffling, even though the most common fusion event in the universe has been initiated. It explains why there's gamma rays during startup, when h1 monoatomic gas recombines to h2 gas in an endothermic (BEC creating) process, but not afterwards, when it's RPF, which produces no gammas. Unfortunately for me, the 1 Dimensional Luttinger Bose-Einstein Condensate seems to have already been proposed, but as far as I can tell, not as an explanation of cold fusion: http://www.researchgate.net/publication/2093276_Bose-Einstein_Condensation_in_the_Luttinger-Sy_Model Bose-Einstein Condensation in the Luttinger-Sy Model Olivier Lenoble<http://www.researchgate.net/researcher/81855005_Olivier_Lenoble/>, Valentin Zagrebnov<http://www.researchgate.net/researcher/9902523_Valentin_Zagrebnov/> 05/2006; Source: arXiv <http://arxiv.org/abs/math-ph/0604068> *ABSTRACT* We present a rigorous study of the Bose-Einstein condensation in the Luttinger-Sy model. We prove the existence of the condensation in this one-dimensional model of the perfect boson gas placed in the Poisson random potential of singular point impurities. To tackle the off-diagonal long-range order we calculate explicitly the corresponding space-averaged one-body reduced density matrix. We show that mathematical mechanism of the Bose-Einstein condensation in this random model is similar to condensation in a one-dimensional nonrandom hierarchical model of scaled intervals. For the Luttinger-Sy model we prove the Kac-Luttinger conjecture, i.e., that this model manifests a type I BEC localized in a single "largest" interval of logarithmic size. On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 7:57 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote: > From: Kevin O'Malley > > It is compelling that the "protonated molecular hydrogen or > H3+, and it > is the most abundant or second most abundant ion in the > Universe, so it is > very common." It is also compelling that RPF is the most > common fusion > reaction in the universe....I consider RPF to be the > Occham's Razor theory: Simplest is best. > > You are an intelligent observer :-) > > The Wiki entry on "trihydrogen" has supporting details - but of course, > does > not consider the putative case where one of the three protons could be in > the very tight or redundant ground state to begin with - having the other > two protons electrostatically bound to it. This would be in a "fractional > trihydrogen anion." > > In effect, two nearly free protons could be mobile around a third, instead > of a balanced triangular arrangement as often pictured; but the two have no > identifiable electron of their own. The electron orbitals of the third are > presumed to be very close geometrically such that this molecule would be > very small. This would promote the RPF reaction in which two protons > continually "try to fuse" but cannot. > > The LENR version of trihydrogen RPF is suggested to exist where excess > energy is seen due to the Lamb Shift, operating at Terahertz frequencies > (it > is a very low-energy reaction, and requires rapid sequential activity to > supply excess energy without gamma radiation). > > Two different spin configurations for H3+ are possible, ortho and para. > Ortho-H3+ has all three proton spins parallel, yielding a total nuclear > spin > of 3/2. Para-H3+ has two proton spins parallel while the other is > anti-parallel, yielding a total nuclear spin of ½ and it is slightly lower > energy. > > In order to have excess energy to shed, there must exist sequential RPF > between two of the three protons, which convert a tiny bit of nuclear mass > to spin energy. Degenerate spin of trihydrogen ions must be pumped back > from > low-to-high for net excess. Such pumping is presumed to be inherent in the > underlying RPF reaction, via QCD. > > More on that later. > > Jones >