“A New State of Matter”: Tresino Theory

Thanks to ECW reader jaman73 for the following comments which were posted on the Always Open thread:

I have been following several papers on Tresino Physics, but the literature may be unfamiliar to many people. Here is a link to the work on Tresino Theory by Drs. Frederick Mayer and the late John Reitz.

https://frederickjmayer.net/tresino-theory/

The last sentence from my previous link may be an excellent prediction.
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A Potential New Energy Source
If the energy from tresino formation can be tapped into, a new source for power production will become possible. Laboratory experiments showing this a viable outcome will be required as the first step toward developing clean power reactors.

From a little reading on the site, Frederick Mayer proposes that in addition to solid, liquid, gas, and plasma as states of matter, a new state of matter exists which he calls a tresino.

He explains that when a hydrogen is superheated and is sufficiently dense, a plasma is formed.

“In the case of hydrogen, electrons separate from their protons, resulting in a gaseous mass of highly excited free electrons and protons. The plasma phase is literally where the excitement begins.

A New Composite is Born

As a plasma cools, a number of things may happen. Ionized particles may regroup, with electrons and protons pairing back up to return to standard hydrogen gas. Other free protons and electrons may be cast off and remain ions. But a third, most interesting option is possible.

tres = three

-ino = small

In the gaseous mixture of free protons and electrons in the plasma phase of hydrogen, it is possible for two free electrons to bind with a single proton to form a new three-body composite that has a net negative charge.”

Seems to me that many of the energy breakthroughs we discuss here, including E-Cat tech, are all depend on plasma formation, and finding ways to extract energy from the plasmas. Different terminology is used, and slightly different processes are employed, but there seems to me to be a focus on what could be the same phenomenon.