01 May, 2004

Cold Fusion in from the cold?

This came in from Mr. Sharkey ("Hey sport! You connect the dots. You pick up the pieces.") this morning:

http://physicstoday.org/vol-57/iss-4/p27.html

"I have committed to doing a review" of cold fusion, says James Decker, deputy director of DOE's Office of Science. Late last year, he says, "some scientists came and talked to me and asked if we would do some kind of review on the research that has been done" since DOE's energy research advisory board (ERAB) looked at cold fusion nearly 15 years ago. "There may be some interesting science here," Decker says. "Whether or not it has applications to the energy business is clearly unknown at this point, but you need to sort out the science before you think about applications."

And, his recent follow-up:

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1892925001/104-8763369-1955159?v=glance&vi=reviews

The announcement of cold fusion in March 1989 at the University of Utah was greeted with astonishment worldwide. Drs. Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons had claimed that an electrochemical cell with heavy water electrolyte and a palladium cathode gave rise to so much excess energy that the mysterious phenomenon had to be nuclear, and was probably a process related to nuclear fusion. Many scientists quickly took sides for or against cold fusion--mostly against. By the end of the summer the experts claimed cold fusion didn't exist. They said it was an experimental error and could not be reproduced. Actually, the story had barely begun. Provocative research had never ended. Cold fusion was and is very much alive.

IN THIS BOOK, Dr. Mizuno describes both the dark and bright sides of the cold fusion story: the frustration, the boredom, the endless guerrilla war with scientists who wanted to stop the research, science journalists who appeared to thrive on the outpouring of supposedly negative results, fruitless battles to publish a paper or be heard at a physics conference, but then also the triumph of dramatic experimental results in the production of huge excess energy and the paradigm busting discovery of the low-energy transmutation of heavy elements found on cold fusion electrodes. It is impossible for one book to encompass the now expanding worldwide effort to understand the cold fusion enigma, but for those who want to learn about the rest of the story, this account of one scientist's experience on the frontiers of knowledge is an excellent beginning.

http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MizunoTnucleartra.pdf (A must read)

http://www.lenr-canr.org/Experiments.htm

http://www.scientificexploration.org/jse/bookreviews/13-2/mizuno.html

http://jlnlabs.online.fr/cfr/
(Sorry for the French but you need to see the pictures)

Something is going on here and we don't know what it is, Mr. Jones.

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