hacking radiation

should read

 Hawking radiation

On Sat, May 5, 2018 at 2:44 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

> The polariton BEC acts as a analog black hole. It thermalizes gamma via
> hacking radiation which is a thermal level emmision. The heat produced by
> hacking radiation is recovered as energy from the vacuum since the anti
> photon falls back into the BEC. This BEC also produces light whose
> frequency is a function of the density of the polariton condensate. It has
> been said that Rossi's QX reactor produces light from red to blue based on
> its power level.
>
> The final emission type is muon production.
>
> for more info, see
>
> https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00822148/file/Flayac-2012CLF22262.pdf
>
> 2.4 Sonic black holes and wormholes in spinor polariton condensates  (page
> 116)
>
> On Sat, May 5, 2018 at 11:53 AM, Roarty, Francis X <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Axil, would your scenario support effects on gas atoms between these
>> surfaces and Casimir/London forces? I like that it explains thermalizing
>> the gamma.
>>
>>
>>
>> Fran
>>
>>
>>
>> *From:* Axil Axil [mailto:[email protected]]
>> *Sent:* Friday, May 04, 2018 11:42 PM
>> *To:* vortex-l <[email protected]>
>> *Subject:* EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Gamma radiation from LENR
>>
>>
>>
>> Sometimes radiation is produced by the LENR reaction. Why does this occur?
>>
>>
>>
>> It is my belief that the LENR process that thermalizes nuclear level
>> radiation is Bose Einstein Condensation (BEC). If a condition of BEC
>> circumscribes the LENR reaction, the BEC will absorb that nuclear level
>> radiation and downshift it into the thermal frequency range.
>>
>>
>>
>> But for a BEC to be created, doesn’t the temperature need to be at super
>> low temperatures near absolute zero?
>>
>>
>>
>> There are two kinds of BEC. The BEC that requires super low temperatures
>> involves atoms. The other kind of BEC is the polariton BEC.
>>
>>
>>
>> See for background see:
>>
>>
>>
>> https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/physics/staff/academic/szymans
>> ka/research/polaritonbec/
>>
>>
>>
>> This kind of BEC is a Condensate that forms in nonequilibrium
>> driven-dissipative systems. The polariton needs to be pumped with energy
>> because it loses energy from the cavity that contains it. If more energy
>> feeds the polaritons than leaks out of the cavity in which the polariton
>> forms, it can live and grow in power. The amount of nuclear energy that the
>> polariton BEC can thermalize is a function of the power that is feed into
>> the Polariton BEC and the amount of power that the Polariton BEC loses over
>> a given time(AKA the Q factor).
>>
>>
>>
>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q_factor
>>
>>
>>
>> What affects the Q factor of a polariton substrate?
>>
>>
>>
>> Polaritons are a form of light…actually a mixture of matter and light.
>>
>>
>>
>> Polaritons cannot exist unless they form on a substrate of a metal. The Q
>> factor is a character of the substrate; it is a function of how the
>> substrate lets light escape the surface of the metal. A rough and pitted
>> metal surface will produce a higher Q factor than a shiny smooth mirror
>> like metal surface because a rough metal surface reflects light less well
>> than a shining mirror like metal surface. In general, this Q factor of
>> surfaces applies to any type of wave based EMF including electrons.
>> Superconducting surfaces support the highest Q factor. Very little power
>> loss occurs from the surface of a superconductor. A polariton condensate
>> will retain it power for months when the polaritons are supported on the
>> surface of a superconductor.
>>
>>
>>
>> A collection of polaritons will form a Condensate when their density
>> reaches a critical value based on the quantum gas theory. The formation of
>> a polariton condensate has nothing to fo with temperature.
>>
>>
>>
>> https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.016602
>>
>>
>>
>> This theory of polariton condensation boils down to these LENR design
>> rule associated with eliminating gamma radiation from the LENR reaction.
>>
>>
>>
>> For a non-fueled reactor.
>>
>>
>>
>> If you are using the surface of a metal to produce your polaritons, then
>> roughen up that surface to make it dull and pitted. This is what Mizuno
>> does to his metal surfaces. Mizumo processes his metal surfaces with an
>> electric arc until that surface is well pitted.
>>
>>
>>
>> You can increase the input power pumping of energy onto the surface of
>> the metal so that the extra power increases the number of polaritons
>> produced by the metal surface thereby causing a polariton condensate to
>> form.
>>
>> When Rossi had gamma radiation problems, he added a heater to his reactor
>> to make sure he stated up a HOT reactor. The thermal pumping to the micro
>> particles was increased by the heater so that on startup, the Rossi E-Cat
>> did not produce gamma from a cold reactor.
>>
>>
>>
>> If metal particles are used instead of a metal surface (as per
>> Piantelli), use a mix of very wide range of various particles sizes from
>> micro to nano sizes.
>>
>>
>>
>> For a fueled reactor.
>>
>>
>>
>> A fueled reactor uses a hydride fuel that contains ultra-dense
>> hydrogen(UDH) or ultra-dense lithium to support the LENR reaction. UDH is a
>> superconductor and the hydride fuel that supports it will support the LNER
>> reaction at any temperature and/or polariton pumping level due to the
>> extremely high Q of the surface of the UDH superconductor.
>>
>>
>>
>> The production of positrons in a LENR reactor.
>>
>> Without a polariton BEC to thermalize gamma radiation, the LENR reaction
>> will produce gamma as a result of positron production.
>>
>> The LENR reaction is a weak force reaction. When the LENR reaction adds
>> mass to the protons and neutrons, they will become excited and decay when
>> the LENR reaction adds energy/mass to the quarks inside these nucleons.
>>
>> As a decay process of these nucleons, both positive and negative muons
>> are produced as a decay product. The positive muons come from the decay of
>> anti-quarks in the nucleons.
>>
>> The decay of the positive muon will produce positrons as a decay product.
>>
>>
>>
>
>

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