The evanescent wave

There is an EMF power amplification factor of up to 10 to the 12 power
demonstrated by nanolenzes formed by nanowires and nanoparticles.

The question is “how does such a concentration of EMF power occur?”

An evanescent wave exits in the near-field of a reflecting surface with an
intensity that exhibits exponential decay with distance from the boundary
at which the wave was formed. Evanescent waves are a general property of
wave-equations, and can in principle occur in any context to which a
wave-equation applies. They are formed at the boundary between two media
with different wave motion properties, and are most intense within one
third of a wavelength from the surface of formation.

In the context of Ni/H LENR+, the boundary between nickel and pressurized
hydrogen forms a boundary trap where the capacitive EMF(electrons)
accumulate because there is a Total internal reflection of this EMF at the
boundary of the metal hydrogen interface.

These electron waves accumulate and superimpose constructively. This EMF
wave function has no solution that transmits energy away from the boundary.

Mathematically, evanescent waves can be characterized by a wave vector
where one or more of the vector's components have an imaginary value.

This coupling between the hydrogen dielectric and the nickel is directly
analogous to the coupling between the primary and secondary coils of a
transformer, or between the two plates of a capacitor. Mathematically, the
process is the same as that of quantum tunneling, except with
electromagnetic waves instead of quantum-mechanical wavefunction.

This near surface interface boundary is the zone were electrons accumulate
by a power concentration factor of up to one trillion. It is this charge
concentration that produces coulomb barrier lowering in the boundary layer
where the evanescent wave forms.


Cheers:   Axil

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