Cold fusion remains experimentally elusive due to the absence of a non-thermal mechanism capable of lowering the D–D Coulomb barrier. This work proposes a resonance-driven model arising from re-examining three idealizations in conventional physics: thermodynamic equilibrium, SI unit definitions, and the fixed value of c. These assumptions conceal digit-sensitive nonlinearities in structured lattices. I introduce a local energy expression E = m ⋅ f^π/e, where f is the Pd–D resonance frequency and π/e provides an irrational amplification exponent evaluated at high digit precision. Small perturbations of f, such as single-photon absorption, yield disproportionately large changes in tunneling probability. Numerical simulations show that 10⁶ absorbed photons at 780 nm raise the D–D tunneling probability to near certainty (an increase of 76. 23 orders of magnitude), producing a sharp “resonance cliff. ” This mechanism offers a falsifiable, non-thermal pathway for D–D fusion and may explain longstanding reproducibility challenges in LENR experiments. The formulation assumes the Observer is embedded within the physical system, not external to it. A structured, digit-sensitive resonance mechanism governed by an irrational exponent formalism (details in the SI) is shown to produce a non-analytic tunneling threshold under realistic condensed-matter conditions along with a defined new Mathematical Identity as a predictor, updated with Mathematical Identity Generalizations. An experimentally falsifiable, mathematically explicit threshold formulation, constructed under realistic Energy quantifiable metrics, an a new Measurement Unit is included as Integrated Supplementary Information within this manuscript. Note (v10): Enhanced POC details in IP note for high precision mpmath, but detailed experimental parameters, simulations, and additional datasets supporting these results are maintained under controlled access due to their sensitive nature. Precise mathematical predictions added. Interested researchers may request access through formal inquiry or NDM, subject to review by the corresponding author.
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A Wed, study studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a760fdc6e9836116a2e7a0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18640975
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