A spark produces a plasma, whenever a plasma cools as it must eventually
do, at a minimum, it produces nanoparticles out of the vaporized electrode
material that carried the spark..


On Tue, Aug 5, 2014 at 12:24 AM, Kevin O'Malley <kevmol...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
>
>
> On Sat, Aug 2, 2014 at 2:47 PM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/LochakGlowenergyn.pdf
>>
>> Here is what cavitation is producing.   These are what Ken Shoulders also
>> produced in spark discharge. Sparks in water always produce cavitation.
>> Only cavitation in water produces gamma because no BEC can be produced.
>>
> ***This strikes me as incredibly important because we've narrowed down the
> focus of discussion to sparks, BECs, gamma ray production and LENR.  HOW is
> it that sparks in water always produce cavitation?  Can a linear BEC form
> in gas simpler than in water?  Isn't it possible for a spark to form a
> Luttinger Liquid linear BEC?  And consider the endpoints of such a
> phenomenon:  at each end would be a few microns of solid Ni or Pd
> encapsulating a linear formation of H or D atoms!  The reason it's so hard
> to get our heads around it is that there are 2 kinds of phenomena
> connecting to each other:  A 1dimensional Luttinger Liquid of atoms
> embedded within a matrix connected to a BEC forming inside of a spark
> across (Ed Storms's utterly important) crack or even just a "sphericule".
> The TRANSITION between these 2 uncommon physical forms is completely beyond
> our grasp to describe.
>
>
>
>> Sparks in a gas do not produce gamma because the spark produces
>> nanoparticle aggregations  in which a BEC is carried.
>>
> ***Okay... where do these nanoparticle aggregations come from?  I've never
> heard of them before.  What are they?
>
>
>

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