At 11:53 AM 10/23/2010, Jed Rothwell wrote:
Abd ul-Rahman Lomax <<mailto:[email protected]>[email protected]> wrote:

Their reaction is understandable.


Yes, of course. But it is really in the same class as the rejection of experimental evidence indicating cold fusion.


I do not think so. Biology is very different from chemistry or physics. There are many rare physical effects that can only be triggered on earth with great difficulty, such as inside a Tokamak or an accelerator. These effects can never play a role in biology.

Sure, as to what is accomplished with tokamaks. A CF cell is far, far from a Tokamak. If we assume that the reaction requires very special palladium and pure D2O, yes. But it may not. We'll know better when we understand what's happening in CF cells. We don't.

The same "we don't" applies to biological transmutation. On the face, it seems very unlikely, for lots of reasons. But so did LENR seem very unlikely.

However, we know that chemical environment can, under some conditions, influence nuclear activity. Good example is Be-7, which is stable when ionized in free space, but which becomes unstable when it has the electrons (decaying through electron capture).

Again, you can come with lots of reasons why this wouldn't apply, that's only an odd exception, etc. All those argumewnts were used against cold fusion. "It seems impossible" is a reason for an individual to decide not to bother looking in to something, but it is never an excuse for rejecting experimental work without the tough work of replication efforts and a demonstration of artifact. Nobody should *ever* be condemned for reporting "impossible" results. For falsification of data, throw the book at them. For error in interpretation, some criticism, perhaps., but to err is human, and people who never make mistakes probably discover little new. But for honest reporting of puzzling results, this is necessary for science.

One of the oft-used bases for rejecting papers on cold fusion was "presents no theoretical explanation of results." That was completely backwards. New theory may be utterly unattainable without a lot of investigation, and if the work is rejected because of lack of theory, there is a vicious circle set up.

Biology has a more limited repertoire of reactions and materials.

But far higher sophistication in how these reactions and materials are applied.

It can only make use of benign reactions and readily available, non-toxic materials.

That is quite misleading. What is developed and conserved by evolution is the genetic blueprint of a species, not of individuals. Something totally toxic to an individual, which might kill and disrupt an individual cell, for example, but which then makes something useful available to the rest of the members of a colony, could be an advantageous trait. Further, deuterium, if it's a necessary ingredient, may be adequately available for some biological purposes. Cells might be able to preferentially move deuterium to some location, for example.

No species on earth can be dependent on elements such as gold, because it is not readily available, or arsenic. There are some ocean plants that concentrate iodine from extremely low concentration sea water, but they can do this because sea water is constantly moving with the tides, so new water is constantly presented to the plants. Plants or animals on land could never do this.

With what?

By the way, Vyosotskii's finding that deinococcus radiodurans may be transmuting Mn to Fe does not show that this is the primary reaction that the organism uses. The primary reaction might be something else, and it simply happens that Mn -> Fe happens with some frequency as a side effect.

Consider all the confusion that resulted from the tritium and neutrons question with cold fusion. People assumed, first of all, that tritium and neutrons would necessarily be major products. Their relative absence was a huge puzzle, leading people to conclude that d-d fusion was not occurring.

My view is that this conclusion was probably correct! The reaction is almost certainly something else. As I've written before, it's still not utterly impossible that d-d fusion takes place, even that it is the primary reaction, but this requires either something completely new (possible but not terribly likely) or several more possible but still quite unlikely things happening at the same time. Big problem: branching ratio and conservation of momentum. Occam's razor, my opinion, "unknown nuclear reaction," just as Fleischmann wrote in his paper....

As Storms writes, there are now some "plausible" theories. Each one still has some unsolved problems, but, to me, they seem much less insuperable than the original d-d fusion hypothesis. Given the possibility of direct fusion to Be-8, the remaining problem is how the resulting alphas or helium atoms end up with less than the 20 KeV that Hagelstein sets as an upper limit. If he's correct! And I assume he is.

Gad, that's low! At first, I naively thought that 23.8 MeV alphas would be just fine, they'd be quickly absorbed, and they might cause some secondary reactions to explain the tritium at low levels, the neutrons at very low levels, and the other transmutations at low levels, plus the SPAWAR CR-39 results. Now, I don't have an explanation for the "front side track" results other than chemical damage.

As to the neutrons on the back, those tell us practically nothing about the main reaction. They are present in some cells (gold wire cathode, and platinum at lower levels) and not others (silver cathode), though all these cells, we can think, are producing the main reaction. This is what I'll be investigating in more detail.

First, anything that can happen in biology tends to be widely exploited by many different species. Even phenomena that do not seem possible in biology sometimes turn out to be possible, and when they do, we have no trouble finding examples of them.


You could say that any fusion reaction in palladium loaded with deuterium would have been noticed before.


That is incorrect. Only a handful of people in history ever looked at palladium loaded with deuterium. Mizuno and maybe a dozen others.

I very much doubt that. If I'm correct, loading palladium with deuterium was a fairly routine way to generate neutrons, through bombardment of the loaded material with accelerated deuterons. Mizuno was doing this not to investigate the material, but for practical application. He didn't invent that. But you could be right, and I'm not about to waste time searching the literature to prove this incorrect. What Mizuno shows, quite well, and I'm sure you know this, is that there could be anomalous phenomena that were never reported.

The material never arises in nature in amounts large enough to be detected. It is artificial, like conditions inside an accelerator. Whereas any biological process that can occur at all tends to occur everywhere, constantly. There are practically no unique or one-of-a-kind reactions or events that occur in only one species. The only thing that comes to mind is high intelligence and high technology in homo sapiens.

Jed, Vysotskii finds transmutations with many different species of bacteria. The others in the field, Kevran and Komaki, find it with multicelled organisms, like chickens, I think. (I have not studied this literature and don't particularly plan to. I am *not* on a biological transmutation soapbox. At least not yet!)


We don't know how many species can manage nuclear reactions (if any). Most organisms would find the radiation intolerable.


The only kind of cold fusion reaction that could occur in organisms would be the reactions that produce no measurable effect other than heat, no matter how closely you look, no matter how sensitive the instrument. People have been looking for radiation, neutrons, particles or what-have-you for 21 years. With some reactions, there is no trace of them, so I conclude they are not there and will never be found.

Yes. It's not true that all reactions that produce radiation must be excluded. Rather, this limits the kind of utility possible, and indicates why an organism like deinococcus radiodurans might need that radiation-resistance. (It's also possible that DR is radiation-resistant from a side-effect that allows it to survive other kinds of toxicity that would otherwise fatally disrupt DNA.)

I assume there must be a continuum between plasma fusion reactions that always produce dangerous emissions, and cold fusion reactions that never produce them. If biological cold fusion exists, obviously it would have to be the benign side of the scale. A cell that produced a dangerous reaction would kill itself off and cause extinction. Only the benign reactions would survive.

Depends on the level and the nature of the emissions and the ability of the organism to resist or handle the damage.



That's why deinococcus radiodurans was a good place to look. It can handle radiation designed to kill everything else, totally. It has multiply redundant copies of its DNA. Ask yourself, Jed, why it wastes so much energy on that redundancy.


Obviously because it lives in heavy water. That's a lot less dangerous than producing the radiation inside the cell! I cannot imagine that any form of cold fusion that produces radiation can happen in biology.

Lots of organisms could live in heavy water, if I'm correct. DR can handle massive amounts of radiation, i.e., each cell can take multiple disruptions and continue to function. It is also possible to repair DNA. Basically, the whole line of argument is a diversion.

I would not think of biological transmutation if there were no experimental evidence. I remain quite skeptical, on general principles, with a single report. I have utterly no reason to doubt Vysotskii personally. He's a long-established and heavily published scientist, before he ever came up with this stuff. But who knows what can happen with an individual. People lose it sometimes. I may, you may, we all may, none of us are immune to this. That's why, for something of this magnitude, we need independent replication. Before that might come such work as laboratory visits, close examination of the experimental work, review of primary research documents and data, etc.

When there are reports that come from researchers who will not disclose the necessary information and cooperate fully with such study, and then replication efforts, again, we have more cause to discount the work, even though there can be decent reasons for that. Larsen claims that he has evidence to support the suppression of radiation through the heavy electrons he postulates allow his ULM neutrons to form. When I found that he was refusing to disclose this evidence for "proprietary reasons," my trust in his claims went very close to zero. Even though he might, again, have perfectly reasonable motives. This problem afflicted cold fusion research for quite some time, or, at least, it's been alleged that it did, that Pons and Fleischmann withheld data because of intellectual property issues. Might be true, but I can understand if it put others off their feed.

I'm not suggesting that cold fusion is *necessary,* nor even that it would be probable. I'm merely suggesting that, if cold fusion is real, and particular if it is based on something like cluster fusion, it would not be terribly surprising if proteins can pull it off.


Without knowing anything about how cells might or might not produce an NAE, I think we can probably rule it out based on old-fashioned evolutionary principles.

Nope. That is the very same argument as "ruling out" cold fusion based on "old-fashioned" nuclear physics. It's an argument from ignorance, both of them. "Unknown phenomenon" is "impossible" because it does not have "characteristics of known phenomena."

As I'm now saying about cold fusion to the pseudoskeptics, *what* phenomenon is impossible. Be specific, and do the math! This is a variation on what I said when lecturing about Islam at colleges where I was invited to speak, to an atheist who proudly said, "I don't believe in God!" I asked, "In what god do you not believe?" And when he was speechless, I said, "The god in which you do not believe, I probably do not believe in either."

What I've been finding is that about all the skeptical literature is basing the rejection on a hypothesis that the reaction, if it exists, must be d-d fusion. I just recently had a bit of a debate with an old friend, a mathematician, who, it seems, has some knowledge of nuclear physics. Adamant, he's been. This is total nonsense, he believes, and he warns me about what he assumes are people who will try to extract my life savings from me on some promise of fabulous profit. He is totally impervious to facts, except that, state a fact to him, if he bothers to respond to it at all, he makes up some ad-hoc reason why it's preposterous.

I told him about Be-8 theory. Preposterous! Unlikely to the third power, he wrote. He didn't explain, but he doesn't realize that I know that argument very well, it is rooted in the assumptions of independent probability, that what Be-8 would require is not just d-d fusion (very low cross section), not just simultaneous collision with another deuteron (original cross-section squared), but the addition of yet another deuteron at the same time (cubed). Such a reaction has never been observed, he asserted with utter confidence and certainty.

I'm at this point wondering if I should even bother to tell him that experiments with palladium deuteride bombarded by deuterons show elevation of 3D fusion by a factor of 10^26 over the naive expectation he pronounced. That this is what led Takahashi to investigate the theory of multibody fusion in lattice confinement, i.e., in situations where particular configurations of atoms are vastly enhanced. Reactions taking place in or on a lattice are not at all the same as in free space with random collision of reactants. It would be like predicting a chemical reaction based on what happens when elements meet each other, purely and simply, ignoring catalysis.

Fleischmann expected that there might be some minor effect on fusion cross-section from high palladium loading with deuterium, but he expected that it would be below measurement error. That was a very reasonable expectation (both the elevation of cross-section, but also the small level of the effect). He was wrong. Deliciously wrong.

If cellular cold fusion were possible, it would be a tremendously valuable adaption. It would greatly enhance the chances of survival for many reasons, such as the ability to generate heat (reducing the need for food), and the ability to make elements in short supply. A species with the latter ability would not suffer from diseases such as pellagra or iodine deficiency.

It might be quite difficult, and, as you have pointed out, might come with possible hazards. Storms speculated -- to much derision on Wikipedia, by the way -- that spontaneous combustion might be the result of some cold fusion process in the body. I find that practically preposterous. But once one is accustomed to accepting several impossible things before breakfast, it might be less preposterous. I am nowhere near ready to go into spontaneous human combustion, and I rather wish that Storms had not mentioned this!

Energetically, it might be easier to get those necessities the normal way than from biological transmutation. Suppose the reaction does produce dangerous radiation. Only a few species, under some conditions, might still find it advantageous.

The DNA for that mechanism would have been passed to many different species, and it would have changed and adapted to many other uses. The adaption would probably arise independently in different species, the way vision and flight have. So it would not be a rare phenomenon, difficult to observe. It would be everywhere you look, with such intensity you could not miss it.

A similar argument, by the way, has been advanced against cold fusion. If certain crystal structures were able to catalyze fusion, even at a very low rate, over time this would accumulate reaction products, etc. Of course, there are some reaction product anomalies that are what led Jones into this field.

The argument does not at all establish impossibility. Always remember, never rule out the unknown!


I find it hard to imagine that chickens could evolve the ability to transmute material into calcium, but other birds and species related to them would not have any ability to do other transmutations and cold fusion energy releases. The ability would confer so many advantages on the animals, the DNA would have spread far and wide by now. It does not resemble the specialized and limited ability to produce visible light in a lightning bug, which would not confer advantages to other species. Bat sonar is another example of a specialized ability would not be valuable for most species. (Both are only useful to animals active in the evening with low light.)

This is one reason why I've not investigated biological transmutation in higher organisms. But I would certainly not condemn someone who does investigate it.

My view is that the Vyostotskii papers were properly included. That was the whole point.

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