On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 7:53 PM, William Beaty <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Thu, 24 Feb 2011, Joshua Cude wrote:
>
>  ,in the data by orders of magnitude (10^10 if I remember), from the fact
>> that the highest values came from BARC within weeks of the press conference
>> (for what is supposed to be a very difficult experiment), that they have
>> gotten smaller over the years, and don't come close to accounting for the
>> measured heat, it is reasonable to conclude that they do not provide enough
>> evidence to suggest nuclear reactions at room temperature in benchtop
>> experiments create measurable heat.
>>
>
> One brief question to clarify a small confusion.
>
> I noticed that in the last week or so you've mentioned that values have
> "gotten smaller over the years."  Perhaps I'm missing something.  Do you see
> this decrease as evidence of problems? Why keep pointing it out?  ( Or did I
> miss an earlier explanation? )
>
>
>
It is characteristic of artifacts that as experiments improve, they get
smaller. On the other hand, real effects -- desirable effects -- almost
invariably become more pronounced as more people work on them, and the
experiments get better. This is true even if the theory is not understood,
just from systematic, or even non-systematic, search of parameter space.
Better conditions and recipes are found, reported, repeated, and extended.
It's the way science works. Especially science that can be performed on a
benchtop.  A good example is high temp superconductivity, where higher
critical temperature and critical current densities seem to be reported
every year (although many claims do not bear up under scrutiny), in the
absence of a widely accepted theory. (The relatively slow progress in plasma
fusion is not difficult to understand when you realize that experimental
iterations are measured in decades, considering progress should be expected
to be exponential in the number of iterations.)

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