The active agent in the Ultra dense hydrogen reaction is the polariton condensate that will naturally form on any nanowire including the one that is derived from the Ultra dense hydrogen nanoparticle.
By supplying both energy and photons, the laser shot increases the density of the polaritons that form in the electron layer of the Ultra dense hydrogen to the point where a polariton condensate is generated. The superconductive nature of the electron cover of the Ultra dense hydrogen provides a lossless home for the polariton condensate. This condensate will destabilize either through mass and/or color change the quarks that make up the ptotons and neutrons that make up the matter exposed to the tachyonic field produced by the polariton condensate. This process is the same tachyonic field process that the Higgs field uses to produce chiral hypercharge state changes in fermions including quarks. See the Higgs mechanism https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgs_mechanism In the standard model, at temperatures high enough that electroweak symmetry is unbroken, all elementary particles are massless. At a critical temperature, the *Higgs field becomes tachyonic <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tachyonic_field>*; the symmetry is spontaneously *broken by condensation <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tachyon_condensation>*, and the W and Z bosons <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W_and_Z_bosons> acquire masses (also called “electroweak symmetry breaking”, or *EWSB*.) Fermions, such as the leptons <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lepton> and quarks <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quark> in the Standard Model, can also acquire mass as a result of their interaction with the Higgs field, but not in the same way as the gauge bosons. In simple language, the polarion condensate effectively modifies the Higgs field which then messes with the quarks in the matter that the condensate enfolds. On Mon, Jul 22, 2019 at 3:11 PM Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote: > This PR video was made for investors, and is impressive in its claims. > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZoWMJNT4J88 > > Of course, we are begging for more specific technical details about their > progress. They claim to be converting charged particles from laser ablated > dense hydrogen directly into electricity. That would be on a laboratory > scale. > > Will it scale up? > > In terms of companies with adequate funding, IP and vision - companies > which could move to market soon, this is the pick of the litter, IMHO. By > comparison, Mills has spent far more for far less and is stuck with a > dangerous toxic device with a short lifetime, while Brillouin is even > further away from commercial relevance. > > Since the video had only 3 views when I watched it - obviously they could > use a little PR... > > ... and obviously, very few observers share my optimism about commercial > prospects for Norront. > > > > > >

