From: Jed Rothwell I uploaded 12 ICCF-14 papers today.... Here is an important one that I did a lot of work on: Celani, F., et al. Deuteron Electromigration in Thin Pd Wires Coated With Nano-Particles....
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/CelaniFdeuteronel.pdf Excellent Work! Fabulous Paper. This could end up being one of the most important papers on the entire LERN site. I get the impression that people don't give the Italians enough credit in science. Yet from an unbiased perspective, there is probably no higher quality work going on in the entire field of LENR. Maybe it's a language thing- too many vowels or whatever - maybe we expect something more artistic or tasty - than scientific from that culture. Frascati is famous for its beauty and fine art but it is also a "science town" - the Los Alamos of Italy, but without the misplaced prejudice against fusione fredda, so to speak. The Fascati Nuclear Laboratories are world famous (and the vino ain't bad either). They seem to have more funding than anyone on the planet right now. Maybe they own a few of those vineyards. And - as for the gist of this important paper (more convincing than Arata really) - yes, anything "nano" is overhyped to the max in the popular press these days - HOWEVER - not so in LENR - where 'nano' could very well be the key to robust energy. You simply cannot overhype it, if it is the key to success. ... so why not a much greater emphasis on nano ? if you look at LENR as a QM effect, and you look at the Casimir force as one of the key energy resources available in QM, and if you look at the geometric range of the Casimir force, then voila (make that ecco) it is all fitting together like a Da Vinci code ... Ciao (you say hello, I say goodbye) Jones

