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 Date: 9/9/2005 1:32:29 PM
 Subject: [BOBPARKS-WHATSNEW] What's New Friday September 9, 2005

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 9 Sep 05   Washington, DC

 1. KATRINA: THE COST OF THE HURRICANE RECOVERY KEEPS GROWING. 
 The New York Times today estimated the recovery costs at more
 than $100B.  So far, Congress has approved $51.8B in spending. 
 Meanwhile, there have been huge tax cuts for some of us.  So the
 focus of today's What's New is on unanticipated expenditures.

 2. ZERO-POINT ENERGY: KATRINA REVIVES A STRUGGLING INDUSTRY.  
 Even as gas approaches the price of bottled water, Katrina has
 cut oil production in the Gulf and shut down key ports.  Drilling
 in the ANWAR faces a key vote, and the President has ordered oil
 released from the strategic reserve.  So where is the free-energy
 industry?  Right on schedule.  The San Francisco Chronicle had a
 rather skeptical article in the business section this week about
 a "clean, inexhaustible energy source."  However, we don't do
 perpetual-motion in the 21st Century.  Nowadays we tap zero-point
 energy http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN02/wn080202.html, and
 Magnetic Power Inc says it's "on the verge" of it.  "We are still
 having trouble making it repeatable," the CEO said. "All we know
 is that we're seeing more energy output than input, what else
 could it be?"  Is this sounding vaguely familiar?  The Air Force
 sank $600,000 in the company.  Last year, the AF was investing in
 teleportation http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN04/wn102904.html. 
 Any time now we can expect to hear new claims for cold fusion.  

 3. HYDROGEN ECONOMY: "NEW CATALYST PRODUCES HYDROGEN FROM WATER."
 Well, not exactly.  The prospect of a hydrogen economy hinges on
 the ability to produce hydrogen economically.  Thirty years ago,
 an inventor named Sam Leach claimed to have invented a car that
 ran on water.  He said it used a secret catalyst to dissociate
 water.  That would be thermodynamically impossible.  But a brief
 report in Scientific American last week implied a new rhenium
 catalyst might dissociate water.  It was based on an article in
 the Journal of the American Chemical Society, but the title of
 the story in SA was misleading.  The hydrogen was from catalytic
 oxidation of organosilanes.  Cars still won't run on water.

 4. MISSILE DEFENSE: WE DON'T SEEM TO HEAR MUCH ABOUT IT LATELY. 
 Maybe it's no longer needed; after all, the election is over.  A
 report from the General Accounting Office this week doesn't ask
 whether it works.  It didn't the last we heard 8 months ago,
 http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN05/wn021805.html.  GAO concludes
 that funds are needed to sustain the system to 2011.  Why sustain
 it?  In 1979, in Grand Forks, ND, a worthless missile defense
 system was turned off 24 hours after it was declared completed.  

 5. MARS: TESTING A FISSION-POWERED ROCKET ENGINE TO SEND HUMANS. 
 The problem is finding a place to test it here on Earth.  In the
 first test of a nuclear rocket engine in 1965, the exhaust was
 just aimed skyward.  NASA will not be allowed to vent to the
 atmosphere this time.  Design and operation of a Ground Test
 Facility capable of removing fission products from the exhaust is
 a major engineering project.  Why is it we're going to Mars?

 THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND.
 Opinions are the author's and not necessarily shared by the
 University of Maryland, but they should be.
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