Much of the skepticism over cold fusion has been maintained by a failure to distinguish between the primary reaction and possible secondary reactions. It has become apparent -- and should have been apparent from the beginning, and especially once the Fleischmann report of serious neutrons was withdrawn as artifact -- that the primary reaction does not generate neutrons, which itself means that it's something quite unusual and unexpected. However, from the reported excess heat and from strongly correlated helium measurements, I consider it well established that the primary nuclear ash is helium, and that the primary fuel, the starting point, is deuterium.

Now, if helium is being made from deuterium, as it apparently is (though another primary reaction fuel remains possible, perhaps palladium or lithium or other element present in the cell), we would expect, no matter what the mechanism is, that there would be some incidence of hot products, even if most of the energy is somehow dumped to the lattice. And these hot products could easily be hot enough to themselves cause secondary fusion reactions, which would be ordinary hot fusion and which would have the expected radiation signatures of some form or other of deuterium fusion, probably.

If tritium is generated occasionally as a product, much of this tritium might fuse, because it would be made hot from its birth, and what would be detected with tritium analysis could be only a small portion of the actual tritium generated. Reports of tritium being found in CF cells are consistent enough that it's reasonable to assume some level of tritium generation, but, as a rare pathway, it might be quite variable, depending on exact cell conditions, some conditions might encourage it more than others, if it is not merely a simple branching effect.

The variability of CF experimental results, that sometimes an effect was found that was well above background, and sometimes it was barely detectable, and sometimes it was not detected at all, and that few experiments were exact replications with a single experimental variable, all contributed to the skepticism.

In fact, it is possible that there are many low-energy nuclear reactions, of varying rarity, occurring under different conditions. There was, at the beginning, some idea that there could be only one reaction, because surely a whole family of reactions would have been discovered before, and therefore the experimental variability led to unreasonable skepticism.

It's the old story of the elephant and the blind men, who report their experience of an elephant: it's like a tree, no, it's like a snake, no, it has a tail like a horse, etc. Surely if they were all reporting the same animal, their stories would match! But not necessarily.

But there never had been an exhaustive search for LENR, that only began with 1989, and still hasn't been exhaustive, with lots of tantalizing clues that might take many years to follow.

There is indeed a danger in uncritically amalgamating very different experiments as, all together, confirming LENR, as some general field. However, the baby was tossed out with the bath-water. Heat vs. helium is reasonably established across a family of independent and confirmed experiments, though I'd certainly like to see more replication of accurate measurements, particularly because the exact ratio of heat/helium tells us a great deal about what's going on in the cells, and, further, what the limits are on other reactions taking place, in some cases.

One of the great tragedies is that the CF community did not develop its political strength, enough to hold the DoE to the recommendations of its own panels. The community was never so small that it would have been impossible to do this; but, regardless, it didn't happen. It may soon all be moot, the wall is crumbling, that's obvious.

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