leonAzul
Illuminator
Sorry, accidental double post.
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No. I meant "rebutted" as in proven wrong. You disagree?
We are discussing the biggest scientific controversy in modern time, still raging.
The common knowledge is that cold fusion got thoroughly "debunked" as early as 2 months after the announcement. That's the historical context.
Yes, and we are still waiting for the same to happen with LENR/cold fusion, don't we?
b) The Ephraim Fischbach beta/sunspot correlation
Y
There is nothing more amusing than a nuclear physicist blathering about what is "categorically impossible". Until a few years ago, you people didn't even notice that certain beta emitters are influenced by sunspot activity.
I asked what is wrong with it, in singularis. And yes, different experiments focus on different measurements, depending on expertise, funding etc. However, they all show indications of LENR.
Now that is a good one I would have liked to have details on. That would be shall i say amusing :
Try here and here. It gets dragged up every couple of years.Now that is a good one I would have liked to have details on. That would be shall i say amusing :
Exactly.Well, Fischbach and collaborators claim to see nuclear decay rates that vary by 10^-3 on monthlong-ish cycles. They seem to be claiming that this sort of variation is *commonplace*, as they report discoveries in 22Na, 36Cl, 137Cs, 226Ra, you name it. They are the only group reporting any non-null results along these lines. Informally, I'd report that their early papers were *terrible* and did not give me confidence that this was a group with good systematic-error-analysis skills. (I have not kept up with their ongoing output in any great detail. Not enough hours in the day.)
Meanwhile, at least three or four independent groups with their own datasets report that they looked for these variations and (in published papers) say they can't see any such thing. A non-Fischbach measurement (i.e. an independent confirmation) would change things, but in the meantime it smells like an uncorrected systematic error in Fischbach's data. ETA: Which is not a stretch of the imagination, given what we know about how hard it is to stabilize a detector's efficiency below the 1% level.
But it is incredibly efficient at doing this - producing a vast amount of paper, forum posts, and hot air with virtually no input at all.Y.. It would be the greatest discovery if it was producing usable energy. At the moment all it produces is paper and forums posts.
And as soon as P&F's claims were known everyone attempted to replicate their alleged fusion. There were literally hundreds of groups working on this (I was an undergrad and involved with one) all over the planet. The only result was a few accidents and a couple of people killed.
But not enough to brew a cup of tea.But it is incredibly efficient at doing this - producing a vast amount of paper, forum posts, and hot air with virtually no input at all.
The civil service and local authorities, not to mention the European Commission, must be jealous...
That, or accidental ignition of high pressure hydrogen being stuffed into palladium rods. What did NOT cause any explosions, though it has been hinted at by CF enthusiasts, was runaway nuclear reactions.Wow! Overpressure of test equipment?
Indeed. As opposed to evidence.
Evasion.
Where are all those peer-reviewed paper you promised?
More evasion. And demonstration of continuing lack of understanding of science.
Your unwillingness to accept reality? Indeed.
That's nice dear. Now where's the evidence? Surely after all these decades you should have something to show.
And you're evading the question.
Deliberately I suspect.
Indeed. Nor does he seem to have read the "papers" he cites.
That, or accidental ignition of high pressure hydrogen being stuffed into palladium rods. What did NOT cause any explosions, though it has been hinted at by CF enthusiasts, was runaway nuclear reactions.
Some people forgot that deuterium is still chemically hydrogen, with the same propensity for exploding when mixed with oxygen.....Wow! Overpressure of test equipment?
Yep. If they were true the claimed mechanisms of cold fusion would have shown effects elsewhere long before now.I don't have enough education to critique LENR claims, but I don't doubt that for a moment.![]()
Some people forgot that deuterium is still chemically hydrogen, with the same propensity for exploding when mixed with oxygen.....
Also palladium makes good, if expensive, shrapnel.
In fact there have been five known detonations in "cold fusion" experiments (Standford, Hokkaido, Marseille, Tokyo and Moscow) leaving one (Andrew Riley) dead and six needing hospital treatment. Three are known to be hydrogen explosions, one a steam explosion and the last is cause unknown (but probably leaking hydrogen detonating). Like everyting else to do with cold fusion there's no sign of actual nuclear energy.
Yep. If they were true the claimed mechanisms of cold fusion would have shown effects elsewhere long before now.
Has anyone seen this recent TED talk on nuclear fusion, and if so what are your thoughts? Is there anything promising here, or not?
Michel Laberge: How synchronized hammer strikes could generate nuclear fusion
He claims they got some neutrons out of their proof-of-concept prototype...(Not gonna watch the video, but read a bit of their written materials.) I'll believe it when I see it work. At first glance it seems like their hot plasma is going to escape through Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities long, long before it reaches fusion-friendly pressures.
Here's a Rossi fanboy site with an article on the "report". http://nickelpower.org/2014/10/08/3rd-party-report-prerelease/#comment-72110It seems that Rossi has made a great leap forward in his ecat development. It appears that he no longer needs hydrogen.
...
http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/...million-times-the-energy-density-of-gasoline#
I haven't read the report as I prefer fairy tales written by people of greater literary ability than the half witted Swedes who wrote it. Maybe Rossi should have commissioned Germans instead.
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