At 04:44 PM 2/25/2011, Jed Rothwell wrote:
I wrote:

However, I just meant that the margin of error bars are marked at the bottom of the graph along with the blue line for light water, and the red heavy water line is far above that margin.


Plus, PLUS! the red line is beautifully correlated with a control factor, current density. You can see that at a glance. A correlation is an important way to separate noise from meaningful data.

Yes. Correlation demonstrates probable common cause. However, note: a correlation between current (or current density, pretty much the same thing) and power is not surprising! Just from that correlation, in fact, Kort asserted that the problem was input power estimation error due to bubbling, which would, indeed, by itself, produce this effect. If there were enough noise.

I pointed out the relative lack of elevation with hydrogen, and Kort -- correctly, I think -- pointed out that hydrogen bubbles would be smaller, because they would be more bouyant (twice as bouyant), and so there would be less influence caused by them, perhaps, on the current. While I wasn't convinced -- no thorough analysis was done -- it was, at least, plausible, that deuterium and hydrogen would behave differently in this respect. I was suspicious, however, that the difference would be as great as shown in the graphs. Perhaps there might be half as much bubble noise, half as much input power error, which would have shown very clearly.

His theory was inconsistent with the time behavior of both cells, and when we realize that the same current excursion, also under conditions of high loading, produced a very different result, no excess heat, the first two times this was run, with hydrogen and deuterium behaving the same, when we realize that there were platinum cathode calibrations that would also have shown the bubbling -- with no loading issue -- the theory came unglued.

Not that this made any difference to Kort! Even though Britz has now issued a study of the influence of bubble noise on input power estimation, Kort is still trying to keep this theory's head above water, saying that he's in communication with Britz about "errors" in the Britz analysis.

Britz was very thorough. But Britz can be summarized like this. Bubble noise has little power over 3 KhZ. The power supply electronics can handle about 1 MHz. The bubble noise has only the tiniest of effects on the power supply, this source of error can be disregarded.

In conversations with Kort, I'd stated that I doubted there would be noise over 10 KHz, based on an understanding of how bubbles would actually shift resistance, and that the power supply could handle at least up to 100 KHz. I was being very conservative with seat-of-the-pants estimates, based on general experience. Kort simply disregarded all this, and, in fact, made claims that the frequency of the noise was irrelevant. He did a nice demonstration of a particular kind of error that Feynman liked to skewer: over-reliance on math. So I'll examine this a little, for fun.

Kort is correct in that the energy involved in a transition from one state to another is independent of the time the transition takes. That's implied by the laws of thermodynamics. Kort justified his statement by appeal to very complex math that I didn't bother to try to understand, not that it would have been impossible, just time-consuming for me, and I didn't doubt the analysis itself, but how it was being implied.

A transition involves so much energy. Power is energy per unit time. Energy doesn't depend on the time a transition takes, but power does. If a transition happens once, and back, in the entire experimental period, the "AC power" is very, very tiny. If it happens a million times a second, it could be very large. The *total energy* from AC power, then, would depend very much on how many transitions there were in the experimental period.

Kort lost himself in his math, believing that he'd correctly analyzed the situation, fooling himself, then, with a belief in the solidity of his theory because it was firmly grounded in "math." And he assumed that if his math were correct, he must be correct, and he ridiculed my counterclaims because, he claimed, I was arguing with "math." And he extended this into a whole universe of claims. McKubre, he confidently asserted, didn't believe that telephones worked. Obviously, McKubre believes that telephones work!

What was Barry doing here? He saw -- correctly -- a kind of analogy between bubble noise and the operation of a carbon microphone. Phones transmit AC power, based on the resistance variation of the carbon mike, as the granules are compressed or relaxed by sound pressure. Kort asserted, again and again, that McKubre didn't believe in "AC power," nor did I, when, in fact, both McKubre and I specifically acknowledged AC power.

Kort simply missed that a constant current power supply is immune to low-freqency resistance noise. I could see his error every step of the way, but he was so attached to finding a conclusion that made everyone else into stupid idiots that he couldn't grasp i.t

We fool ourselves. It's a cautionary tale for all of us. I'm pretty solidly convinced of the reality of cold fusion, by an unknown reaction that converts deuterium into helium. But if I become attached to that conclusion, I can easily fool myself.

I'm convinced by Pam's neutron results. But I'm intending replication, and if I become attached to outcome, I'm screwed. I'm setting up experimental conditions that should be possible to *easily* replicate. Because I'm using new material, I can't have a fixed way of interpreting the results. That's hazardous! That's the kind of thing that caught Oriani. If you can vary the analysis to fit the results, you can easily create an impression of solidity where there isn't anything real. Maybe what I'll see will be so clear that, obviously, that won't be a cause.

But, then, the real proof will come in replication *of the exact experiment,* as far as it can be made exact. This time, with the replications, there will be expected results, and a pre-determined method of analysis. And if I then sell these kits and others run them, and these results are published, we will have multiply-redundant independent findings. Only one small detail would be left, if anyone wants to dot the i's and cross the t's. My design and materials will be fully documented. If one wants a completely independent demonstration, they would obtain the materials and fabricate the cell themselves. But that might be overkill, for such a small detail in the overall picture of cold fusion, the production of neutrons at very low rate with a gold co-dep cathode.

Or I don't find anything! *That will also be interesting.* Don't worry, folks, I won't jump to conclusions. There are hundreds of ways to do this wrong, and there is a good chance I'll find at least one of them, the first time.... Every mistake, though, if investigated, will build the body of evidence.

Just think of what it would have been like if the negative replicators in 1989 had not stopped with "negative," but had then, trusting that the original report wasn't Totally Stupid -- normal scientific courtesy and prudence -- they had kept trying. There would have been obvious steps to take. They did not take them, and the result was 20 years of missed opportunity, for the most part.

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