At 09:36 AM 12/4/2012, Jed Rothwell wrote:
People in a given field are sometimes biased against new ideas proposed by outsiders. That is not because they are mistaken about their own ideas. Their own ideas are valid, but the outsider's ideas are an improvement. They oppose the ideas because -- again as I said -- they know nothing about them.

Yes. That happens.

The cascade on cold fusion was facilitated by the claim that the Fleischmann-Pons Heat Effect was quickly associated with "fusion." I still read material, recently written, that appears to assume that Pons and Fleischmann claimed fusion, i.e., claimed the "impossible." And then, of course, their claims "were not reproduced."

Yes, Jed, I know this drives you batty. After all, 153 Frenchmen can't be wrong. Or something like that. However, Pons and Fleischmann originally claimed substantial neutron radiation. They knew that this radiation was far below what their heat would indicate, had the reaction been d-d fusion. But even that low level was artifact. In reality, in hindsight, the FPHE generates somewhere between little to no neutron radiation. If there is anything, it's probably a secondary effect. (And that's exactly what SPAWAR claims.)

*That* was never replicated, the opposite.

And the heat was not a "nuclear effect," in itself. By the time that the nuclear ash was identified, the cascade had fully formed and physicists were not paying attention. And why, indeed, should they pay attention?

This was not a physics experiment. It was chemistry. The experts, with few exceptions, were chemists. One of the real tragedies of 1989-1990 was that chemists failed to defend their own. "Nuclear" be damned! These cells were generating heat, and chemistry wasn't adequate to explain it, apparently, and contrary theories -- i.e., that there was some mistake -- were *never* confirmed. And once helium was known to be generated commensurate with the heat, scientifically it was all over. The correlation showed that the measurements were not artifact, and the value of the correlation established that, very likely, the reaction was indeed some kind of fusion, mechanism unknown.

So why didn't the chemists stand up for their colleagues? My view has become that it was not -- and is not -- the job of the chemists to explain the FPHE, other than through describing the chemical conditions. It was -- and remains -- the job of physicists, particularly experts in quantum field theory. And, it turns out, such people often had positive opinions about the possibility of cold fusion, going way back. They knew that the approximations of quantum mechanics used to rule out d-d fusion were just that, approximations, and they knew that we didn't know enough about the solid state to rule out "unknown nuclear reactions," which is what Pons and Fleischmann actually claimed.

Had the chemists stood up to be counted, well, the American Chemical Society is the largest scientific society in the world. The American Physical Society, because of the large big-science projects, had the political connections, and strong economic motives, but it was the silence of the chemists that allowed the physicists to be so effective in suppressing funding.

The historians of science have begun to examine the history of cold fusion, and I expect to see much more in the future. This really was, as Huizenga called it, the Scientific Fiasco of the Century, and he didn't know the half of it.

I think the scientific method ensures that when a large group of people study physical phenomena for a long time, most of their data will be good, and their conclusions correct. If that were not true, the scientific method would fail. Our textbooks and technology would be far less reliable than they actually are.

A large group of scientists, some recruited by the DoE for the ERAB panel report, and some funded by the DoE, did study the phenomenon of cold fusion, but with utterly inadequate preparation and under time constraints that made their negative results inevitable. The DoE wasted a lot of money in this way, and they got nothing conclusive out of it. The research itself was useful. It established part of the parameter space for cold fusion. Basically, if you do what they did, you don't see the effect. That's important to know!

The problem, though, was in the conclusions drawn from that research. Somehow, because these were "reputable research groups," their negative results were presumed to negate positive results from others, which is preposterous. A failed replication is simply a failed replication; only if conditions could be *exactly controlled* could one even begin to assume that a failed replication is contrary evidence to positive reports. Once the basic FPHE had been confirmed by one or two groups, the search for cause or artifact should have become intense. Instead, the scientific community largely turned away.

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Frankly, that's silly. That reminds me of assertions that oil companies are suppressing cold fusion. Or the counter-assertions by opponents that cold fusion researchers are only in it for the grant money. Believe me, there is no grant money in cold fusion!

There will be. Soon. There already is some level of funded research. But nobody will get rich from this, not from the basic scientific research. It will be done to resolve specific open questions. (For example, a more accurate determination of the the heat/helium ratio with the FPHE.) Massive searches of the parameter space will be funded by private enterprise, probably, though some public research might be done in this area.

What I see near-term funding for is targeted research to resolve open issues, and particularly to nail down what has already been observed and at least partially confirmed. This may extend into replication of already-described effects, with improved instrumentation and more detailed study.

Note: this kind of funding of research was the recommendation of both U.S. DoE reviews of cold fusion. The 2004 review was unanimous on it. It's really outrageous that forces against cold fusion were able to prevent *any funding* from the DoE on this. Politically, we need to make that point. The pseudoskeptics have been able to influence the DoE to neglect the recommendations of their own expert panels. Properly, there should be some faces with egg on them.

I know enough climatologists to know they are not living high on the hog. They do not rake in the dollars. They work long hours on tedious, demanding, boring science.

Life is not a conspiracy or a potboiler made-for-TV movie.

Right.

I have a great deal of respect for those skeptics who have actually gotten their hands dirty and who have done cold fusion research, attempting to replicate some-times elusive results. Some of what the cold fusion community has routinely accepted may indeed be artifact. Not every anomaly is a nuclear effect!

Scientific research should never be done to prove or disprove something, except in this way: if we believe something, we test it. We attempt, with whatever we can muster, to disprove what we believe. In order to do that effectively, we may learn to avoid "believing" anything. We just have ideas.

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