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In from the cold (cold fusion heating up again)
The Guardian ^ | Thursday March 24, 2005

Posted on 03/23/2005 9:54:05 PM PST by ckilmer

In from the cold

Sixteen years after the hope, hype and recriminations, cold fusion is news again. David Adam investigates a scientific controversy that won't go away

Thursday March 24, 2005 The Guardian

In the late afternoon of January 24, the academic calm of Japan's Hokkaido University was shattered by an explosion in one of its laboratories. Physicist Tadahiko Mizuno was taking a guest through experiments into a phenomenon called cold fusion. The pair were showered in flying glass, suffering wounds to their face, neck, arms and chest. Mizuno needed a large chunk of detonated scientific apparatus removed from next to his carotid artery and both were deaf for a week.

The blast raises several questions: What went wrong? Have sufficient lessons been learned from a similar explosion in California that killed the British researcher Andrew Riley more than a decade ago? And perhaps most commonly, what on earth are scientists doing still flogging the dead horse that is cold fusion?

The Japanese accident is not the first time that cold fusion has blown up in the faces of its progenitors. Just ask Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann, two previously well respected chemists who found themselves at a University of Utah press conference 16 years ago yesterday, where they heralded cold fusion as an astonishing scientific breakthrough and a limitless source of future energy. The two announced that, with little more than some special water and two metal electrodes, they could harness the power of the sun in a laboratory flask - a star in a jar.

While Pons and Fleischmann went onto the front pages of newspapers worldwide, legions of curious, enthusiastic and sceptical scientists went into their labs to try the simple experiments themselves. As failed attempts to replicate the results piled up, scepticism turned to hostility.

A few months later, a report from the US Department of Energy found no evidence for the effect and put the nascent field out of its misery. That, as far as mainstream science was concerned, was that.

Cold fusion may now be about to get a second chance. In a landmark decision in December, the same US Department of Energy gave a cautious green light to funding cold fusion research. It follows a decade-long investigation by the US Naval Research Laboratory, which concluded that there might be something in the phenomenon after all.

And if, as some predict, cold fusion is due a comeback, then it could start today in Los Angeles, where the American Physical Society has scheduled a session on the subject at its annual meeting.

A handful of scientists have always believed that Pons and Fleischmann were right and - using cash and equipment scraped together from wealthy individuals, private companies and, in at least one case, the US military - have been trying to keep the dream alive. Shunned by the scientific establishment, this hardy band of cold fusion researchers carry out experiments, organise an annual meeting and publish their results in whatever journal will have them. Today, they will get a chance to tell the rest of the world what it is missing.

One speaker is George Miley, a cold fusion believer at the University of Illinois. He says: "Much of the criticism has come from people who haven't worked in the field and much of it stems from the rather sad beginning. The ability to have nuclear reactions take place in solids is remarkable and it opens up a whole new field of physics."

This is where both the promise and the problems begin. Fusion of atoms releases energy, and that process drives the nuclear furnaces at the heart of stars. For decades, scientists have talked about mimicking this stellar fusion on Earth in a reactor; arguments continue about where to build the first prototype, called ITER.

But, just as forcing the north poles of two magnets together takes effort, the driving of two atoms together for them to fuse takes huge amounts of energy. The massive temperatures and pressures inside stars manage it, but scientists are not yet convinced that it could be done efficiently in an artificial way.

So when Pons and Fleischmann said they could do it at near room temperature and pressure, using kit not out of place in a chemistry set, the fusion world stood still. When they switched on their experiment, they said, a palladium electrode absorbed atoms of deuterium (hydrogen with an extra neutron) from the water and crammed them so close together they fused. As evidence, they said the setup churned out more heat than they put in.

"There's not an accepted theory for how this can happen," Miley admits. Worse, even those conducting the experiments concede that the observed effects are sporadic - what works in one laboratory fails in another. To mainstream science, built on the importance of theory, experiment and reproducibility, this puts cold fusion on the wrong side of the tracks.

Miley says: "Mainstream people have no motivation to look at this. They hear it's witchcraft, and people are frightened away. Certainly people in universities don't want to work on it because they would be ridiculed by their colleagues."

So does today's American Physical Society session signal that mainstream science is softening its scepticism? Absolutely not, says Bob Park of the society and one of cold fusion's biggest critics over the past decade. In fact, Park says, there is a cold fusion session every year. "Anyone can deliver a paper. We defend the openness of science. Anyone can get up to speak and if they can convince people, then OK. Early on, we used to have a session in which we collected all the crackpot papers together. It was very popular."

If the American Physical Society has not yet changed its approach to cold fusion, those working in the field can draw some comfort from a more unlikely source. Some 15 years after effectively killing it off, late last year the US Department of Energy performed a remarkable U-turn, at least as far as some cold fusion supporters are concerned. After reviewing the available evidence, it concluded that: "Funding agencies should entertain individual, well-designed proposals for experiments that address specific scientific issues relevant to the question of whether or not there is anomalous energy production in palladium-deuterium systems."

It is far from a ringing endorsement, but it was enough for Peter Hagelstein, a former rising star of physics who now devotes his time to developing cold fusion theories at MIT.

He says: "We've faced some of our harshest critics and we've come away with many of them recommending that funding be made available. If you took a hot fusion or string theory initiative and gathered together their worst critics and presented them with a 15-page document and allowed for one day's worth of presentations, I'm not sure you would get as many people proposing public money be spent on these projects." Hagelstein and other cold fusion advocates insist that there is just too much evidence of unusual effects in the thousands of experiments since Pons and Fleischmann to be ignored.

David Nagel, an engineer at George Washington University in Washington DC, says: "Of the 3,000-plus papers in the field, 10% are very hard to make go away. One per cent are, in my view, essentially bulletproof, as good as key papers in other fields of science."

Little has changed over the past 16 years in both the experimental setup and the results produced: modern cold fusion researchers still look for evidence of the cherished "excess heat" alongside the fusion products neutrons and helium-4.

"There have been many experimental studies that report significant effects. They have been performed by credentialed scientists with adequate materials, good protocols - including calibrations and controls - and data analysis using known methods," Nagel says. "I have been deeply involved in this adventure from the outset and know most of the players. I am certain they are not all liars or fools."

Park, at the American Physical Society, sees it differently: "They're running the same old experiments over and over and getting the same kind of screwy results. Each year there's a new saviour who finally has the proof and a year later we don't hear from them any more."

Both sides say what's needed to break the impasse is the production of a working, cold fusion device. According to Scott Chubb at the Naval Research Laboratory, Roger Stringham of First Gate Energies in Hawaii described just that at a cold fusion conference in France last year. "He puts 200W in and 400W comes out. That's a device, it's a heater. It's probably the first cold fusion device."

Chubb is equally excited about rumours of a breakthrough at a Las Vegas company called Innovative Energy Solutions. In November, it issued a press release heralding "clean energy technology" to "generate six times (12MW) more electricity than it consumes (2MW)". Rod Foster of the company says the technology is based on cold fusion, but could offer no more information about how it works.

"You're getting out enough heat that you can turn the supply off so you've got what looks like some kind of perpetual motion machine," Chubb says.

Extraordinary claims, as the old saying goes, demand extraordinary proof. It may yet be provided, but sceptical mainstream scientists require more than promises and rumours, especially when a miracle energy supply of the future is at stake.

As Park says: "Science is contingent and if somebody comes along with a convincing experiment then we'll have to rewrite the textbooks. But I don't think that's going to happen."

Mike McKubre, a long standing cold fusion researcher at SRI International in California who was injured in the explosion that killed Andrew Riley, disagrees, not surprisingly. "The ability to wield the power of nuclear physics on a tabletop has enormous technological importance," he says. "When the smoke clears it will be obvious to all, and our current critics will claim it was obvious to them all along."

Further reading

Too hot to handle - the race for cold fusion Frank Close, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0691085919

Nuclear transmutation - the reality of cold fusion Tadahiko Mizuno, Infinite Energy Press, ISBN 1892925001


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: coldfusion; energy; fleischmann; fusion; peterhagelstein; physics; pons; science
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1 posted on 03/23/2005 9:54:06 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer

I heard the feds turned cold fusion down last september.

This is the first I've heard that they renenged in December.

Looks like the pace of events is quickening in this field of research.

This is one of those scientific experimental areas you have to keep a weather eye on. Because if they crack the cold fusion nut...it just changes everything... Big Time.


2 posted on 03/23/2005 9:57:32 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer

3 posted on 03/23/2005 9:59:02 PM PST by KoRn (~Halliburton Told Me......)
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To: ckilmer

I wonder what happened to the two first scientists who claimed discovery?


4 posted on 03/23/2005 10:07:52 PM PST by spyone
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To: spyone

they're not into cold fusion research anymore


5 posted on 03/23/2005 10:09:28 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer

bump for later read


6 posted on 03/23/2005 10:09:31 PM PST by Captain Beyond (The Hammer of the gods! (Just a cool line from a Led Zep song))
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To: KoRn

you probably also want to post the viking kitten pics music


7 posted on 03/23/2005 10:10:27 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer

More than likely, this is a chemical reaction with palladium or platinum serving as a catalyst to burn contamination in the liquid.


8 posted on 03/23/2005 10:13:08 PM PST by staytrue
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To: staytrue

Certainly palladium and platinum have served as catalyst in hydrogen production. I've seen a bunch of articles on them. What they do is lower the temperature and pressure needed to split the hydrogen off from whatever it is bound too.

But I don't know what that would have to do with cold fusion.


9 posted on 03/23/2005 10:23:45 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer
Further reading Confusion about Fusion
In .pdf so you have to grab off that page.
10 posted on 03/23/2005 10:30:01 PM PST by atomic_dog
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To: ckilmer
This is one of those scientific experimental areas you have to keep a weather eye on. Because if they crack the cold fusion nut...it just changes everything... Big Time.

Absolutely
11 posted on 03/23/2005 10:31:12 PM PST by Talking_Mouse (Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just... Thomas Jefferson)
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To: atomic_dog

confusion about fusion looks to be about acoustic fusion and not cold fusion.

acoustic fusion has only been around for about four years. The first results were positive. The second results were not so positive. But recently the results have been positive. The science with acoustic fusion doesn't seem quite as mysterious as it does with cold fusion.


12 posted on 03/23/2005 10:40:47 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer

The renewed interest in cold fusion has been building for the past year. The "cold fusion" meme looks like it bottomed out in late 2003.

The graph -
http://www.realmeme.com/miner/other/coldfusionDejanews.png

The methodology -
http://www.realmeme.com/miner/


13 posted on 03/23/2005 11:21:12 PM PST by shimbo
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To: ckilmer

Seems to me you either end up with some helium or you don't. A good high school chemistry/physics student should be able to prove that quite nicely, all it is is a simple spectrogram.


14 posted on 03/24/2005 12:18:01 AM PST by djf
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To: ckilmer
One speaker is George Miley, a cold fusion believer at the University of Illinois.

It's the anti-cold fusion folks who are the believers.
15 posted on 03/24/2005 5:23:38 AM PST by aruanan
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To: ckilmer
I heard the feds turned cold fusion down last september.
This is the first I've heard that they renenged in December.


No, I knew last fall from talking with a representative from the current incarnation of the Office of Technology Assessment (closed in 1995), the acronym of which escapes me at the moment, that they were going to recommend funding. The way this office works is that Congress, for instance, wants to know whether or not to fund a particular project and turns to this agency to assemble a group of experts to analyze the field and the data and to come up with a recommendation. They gave the go-ahead on the study of so-called cold fusion.
16 posted on 03/24/2005 5:28:40 AM PST by aruanan
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To: ckilmer

If cold fusion works, can I finally have my flying car?


17 posted on 03/24/2005 5:59:58 AM PST by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: ckilmer

It's called OPEC!


18 posted on 03/24/2005 6:40:35 AM PST by mdmathis6 (By playing the Devil's advocate, one can often separate self from the Devil!)
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To: ckilmer

Platinum is a catalyst for carbon monoxide burning to carbon dioxide in a car's catalytic converter and it also gets very hot in the process.

I'm guessing that the platinum may be causing impurities in the water to "burn" for a short time producing heat.

In any event, if cold fusion requires platinium, there would only be enough platinum to replace 2 or 3 power plants. The total platinum in the world would not fill an average sized living room.


19 posted on 03/24/2005 7:12:52 AM PST by staytrue
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To: ckilmer; staytrue
Spend some time and research the topic before you offer opinions that are not accurate relating to this topic.

I've studied this topic since late '88 and although there is controversy there is a steady stream of non conflicting experimental results reported that indicate that at least sometimes fusion does take place. The experiments report that tritium and neutrons are detectable in the course of energy production. The only way such products exist in this type of experiment is when hydrogen atoms fuse. The hydrogen is in the form of deuterium or heavy water. The palladium is a hydrogen sink or like a sponge and it is theorized that the atoms get packed in so tightly because of the electrochemical conditions that some fuse.

MIT in Technology Review of 1992 did a whole issue on this topic and discussed the pros and cons. The professor mentioned in this article, Hagelstein, wrote the part that gave some credibility to the topics and experiments. He apparently has since studied it further and come to the conclusion that there is really something there.

Dr. Eugene Mallove of Concord, NH (deceased) a former prof at MIT and publisher of "Cold Times" and an alternative energy magazine and the sponsor of the Cold Fusion meetings often held in Cambridge MA, was a major proponent of the topic. He was ridiculed for years and was murdered at his mother's home in CT last year.

One of the reasons some have thought that Mallove was murdered is to quiet the fact that cold fusion produced tritium, and necessary fusion isotope for making fusion weapons. Nuclear weapons using fusion technology, often called H bombs, can be made smaller and more efficient that conventional fission weapons.
20 posted on 03/24/2005 7:19:07 AM PST by Final Authority
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