At 06:11 PM 8/17/2012, Axil Axil wrote:

The hot fusion people and the nuclear physicist crowd will not believe that LENR is real unless they see lots of neutrons; this is a good political type experiment.

It hasn't worked before, why should it work now?

The main cold fusion reaction, responsible for the FPHE, does not produce neutrons. It's real, and that's easy to show. It does produce a nuclear product, helium. Think that's not a nuclear product? Be my guest, make it some other way.

Ah, yes, I should mention that the often-repeated meme that the helium could be leakage from ambient is *preposterous*, it's only possible to assert that by radically ignoring the actual experimental evidence, which includes, but is not limited to, situations where the produced helium rose above ambient, quite significantly.

The real kicker is that the helium produced is *always* proportional to the anomalous energy, and the ratio is "consistent with" deuterium fusion. Other reactions besides d-d fusion can do that, though they almost certainly involve, then, multibody fusion. I.e., 4D -> 2He-4 or the like.

Bottom line, we don't know what the main reaction is. The pseudoskeptical physics community has made a whole series of demands as to what would satisfy them. It's a moving target, because as evidence accumulated, the demands increased.

1. "Reliable experiment." That means, for them, an experiment that always produces the same results. This is wilful blindness, and an imposition on other fields of particular expectations of physicists, who are accustomed to nice clean experiments where conditions are very precisely controlled. Naturally, these people hate electrochemistry with a passion. It's messy as hell. However, that doesn't mean that science can't be done, it can, and as in all the messier fields, one looks for statistical correlations.

2. "Nuclear product." Originally, it was assumed that the reaction must be d-d fusion or nothing. So the expected products from d-d fusion were sought, and when it was shown, rather conclusively, that these products were not appearing, this was considered definitive refutation of "cold fusion." It's an obvious error. What that worked showed was that the experiment did not reproduce the conditions of hot, d-d fusion. It's something else. It would be like assuming that all burglars wear watch caps with holes cut out for the eyes, and therefore a photo of a burglar is fake because the fellow has no watch cap on.

3. "Two cups of tea" on demand. This is a variation on "reliable experiment." It's total nonsense, because lots of cold fusion experiments run hot and could be used to brew tea, it would mean nothing.

4. "Commercial device." Of course they would be convinced if there is a commercial device. But a physical effect might be nowhere near ready for commercialization, might *never* be commercializable, and that has practically nothing to do with reality. Muon-catalyzed fusion is known and understood and will probably never be commercially useful. FPHE fusion depends on very difficult-to-control material conditions, and the material shifts during the experiment, in uncontrolled ways (so far).

5. "An explanation." I.e., some explanation that will satisfy them.

*Sometimes,* PdD shows anomalous heat. This was shown in hundreds of reports, 153 in peer-reviewed journals alone. What is the source of that heat? That was, beginning in 1989, a simple scientific question. The physicists, because of a relatively small number of negative replications-- which only show replication failure -- began to assume "unidentified calorimetry error." They stuck to this story in spite of massive reports, using many different kinds of calorimetry.

There never has been a peer-reviewed report that actually explained the source of the heat, other than attempts to explain it as a nuclear effect. Yet physicists, many of them, to this day, treat cold fusion as a closed book. "Wasn't that proven to be bogus, twenty years ago?"

No. It wasn't. That's plain and simple. Questions were raised, that's all. And then, over the next decade, the questions were answered, but the physicists stopped listening.

Most importantly, by 1991, expanded in 1993, the ash was identified: helium. And that does, in fact, "explain" the excess heat. It's proportional to the helium produced, at (approximately) the value expected from any form of deuterium conversion to helium. That does *not* explain the *mechanism."

To explain the mechanism is going to take, most likely, a concerted effort on the part of quantum physicists, using the most sophisticated tools of quantum field theory. And we aren't yet giving these physicists enough data, nor are they attempting to develop it themselves.

That is why this is truly a "Scientific Fiasco." We have the mass abandonment of a field by those whose expertise would be needed to resolve mysteries. Chemists struggle along, with little guidance from accurate theory. And the physicists continue to blame the chemists for not explaining the phenomenon.

Real science: determine the cause of the FPHE. If it's not nuclear, what is it? If it's systematic error, fine. Show the error. It might be necessary to show different errors for different calorimetric approaches, as well as the correlated helium measurement errors. Warning: I don't think you will succeed.

If you do the basic work, that is, you take an established approach to demonstrate the FPHE, and measure helium, you will be replicating the "single reliable experiment" that was demanded. That experiment was thought to be one where the same level of heat is always produced. That's a bit equivalent to demanding that the same result happen every time from a coin toss. No, is the heat correlated with the helium? If so, what is the value of the correlation, the heat/helium ratio? With this approach, *every experiment* produces useful data. There are no "failures," unless one truly makes a mistake, such as allowing helium leakage from ambient, or an error of calorimetry, such as happened with one of Miles' cells where they allowed the cell to boil dry and thus got some "excess heat" -- with their method -- from recombination.

The "single reliable experiment" has been available since 1993 or so. Huizenga noticed this, and commented on the amazing significance of Miles' findings. He simply expected that Miles would not be confirmed "since there are no gammas," i.e., the gamma rays expected from helium formation are not observed.

Huizenga's comment -- it's in the second edition of his book, "Cold Fusion: Scientific Fiasco of the Century," shows how deeply the assumption of "if it's real, it must be d-d fusion" penetrated the minds of the skeptics. The ash is helium and it's correlated with heat, or not, and that is entirely idependent of whether or not gammas are found. In fact, if gammas were found, their energy would have to be added to the heat, that is a way that energy could escape. But they are not found. Almost nothing is found but helium, everything else is at quite low levels, low enough to be explainable by rare branches or secondary reactions, produced by a primary fusion reaction.

It's actually up to the physicists to do that, not the chemists. Yet physicists seem to be expecting that chemists

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