Again, this is name-calling instead of physics arguments. If the theoretical calculations in the Journal of Fusion Energy are wrong, what is wrong with them? Calling them a ghost or crack-pot is something you could say of any theory, without in any way actually criticizing it. The more detailed derivations in the old Particle Beams paper should be available on our site, so I just requested permission from the publisher to do that. I would assume I will get it after 32 years! But if you really know things that are wrong with the JFE derivations, here is your chance to say what they are.
That was not name calling. This is a serious question about
whether your focus fusion work is attempting to be scientific or whether it's settling for the easier task of "let's convince ourselves, and then write it up so it sounds good".
Your 2012 paper
states that it builds on a 30-year-long "quantitative elaboration" of Bostick's "theory" of plasmoids, which sounds more impressive than it turns out to be on clicking through. OK, y'know, I know you don't
want to talk about signs of crackpottery, but "discussion of serious issues avoided by pretending it's resolved elsewhere" is a sign of crackpottery.
Let me dig through J Fusion Energ (2011) 30:367–376 (DOI 10.1007/s10894-011-9385-4) for details, for example.
The role of the plasmoids in producing the fusion neutrons
and the physical processes involved in their formation
and maintenance has been hotly debated among DPF
researchers for decades. The model that best fits all the
existing data makes the role of the plasmoids central to
neutron production. This model, initially developed by
Bostick and Nardi [4], and confirmed by observations of
several groups over three decades, was elaborated into a
more quantitative theory by the present author [20–24].
This paragraph is clearly intended to convey that, despite some past controversy, the Bostick "model" has now been firmly established---there is no need to worry your little heads about that, dear reader. But, seriously, has it?
That "fact", perhaps the crucial one in this entire discussion, is the one you didn't bother citing! Is it indeed a fact? Are there
people other than you who indeed believe that this is "the model that best fits all the existing data"? Given the antiquity of the Bostick paper,
what model precisely is the one they're using, and is this the same one you're using? Did
someone run COMSOL at some point and make predictions which you're confirming? It'd be nice to know. Your paper is no help.
Yes, I can find out more (and I will---wait a sec) but the "the reader should check for himself" thing is ... well, it's not supposed to be
adversarial. I shouldn't have to do this. The norm in science is that the author walks the reader through it honestly.
The funny thing is, there
do appear to be people doing modern-looking computational models of DPF plasmas. A nice review article by Soto (
http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0741-3335/47/5A/027/meta) certainly does NOT indicate that anything Bostick-related has been "confirmed by observations of several groups over three decades." Lee et. al. don't appear to be invoking Bostick or plasmoids. The Polish groups don't appear to be invoking Bostick or plasmoids. What am I supposed to conclude? Maybe the thing you describe as "hotly debated" is, in truth, basically you vs. everyone else? Maybe the thing you described as "confirmed by several groups" is, in truth, confirmed by you alone? Maybe you're talking about this guy Auluck, but didn't feel like citing him, just to make things harder for your readers?
In a later article Lee and Soto and others give a different version of the state of what you call a "raging controversy": (doi:10.1088/0741-3335/51/7/075006)
Mechanisms such as moving boiler, beam–target, gyrating particles [1–5] and others such as quasi-Maxwellian hot plasmoids [6] have been invoked to explain the high measured Yn. ... Again from such mechanisms come forth general results such as the temporal and spatial characteristics of the neutron pulses, and representative yield numbers put forward to illustrate the validity of the assumed mechanism. There do not appear to be any published results demonstrating non-thermonuclear modeling which may be applied to any particular machine to derive Yn in a manner where such modeled data may be compared with specific experiments
Translation:
the experts do not find your model convincing or conclusive, Eric, and they said so in print. Two problems here, which again speak to the "does this make you sound serious or does it make you sound crackpot" issue:
a) You chose not to cite this, or anything like it. In fact you chose to polish it up (perhaps I should say "misrepresent it") when you summarized the "controversy" over these mechanisms in a way that made your version sound (to the non-reference-clicking reader) so nice and uncontroversial. That's not the sort of thing scientists do. If your approach is sui generis,
you can say so.
b) You've been saying (as an attempt to insult/dissuade me) that only an incompetent or sloppy physicist could read your paper, follow the derivations, and do anything other than agree with your conclusions. That is manifestly not true. In fact, Lee and Soto's objections (your yield numbers get plugged into "assumed mechanisms" despite the lack of "non-thermonuclear modeling" of the mechanisms themselves) is almost exactly the same as my objection in post 119 (
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=11108652&postcount=119) Huh. Are they "just name-calling" too?