A view from the physics establishment.

Martin Fleischmann:
1927–2012<http://physicsworld.com/blog/2012/08/martin_fleischmann_1927-2012.html>

Aug 6, 2012

*By Hamish Johnston*

In the autumn of 1989 I was doing what many physicists were also doing at
the time – I was trying to get deuterium atoms to fuse together in a solid
after hearing about the work of Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons.
Working at the University of Utah, the pair used electrolysis to “load”
metal electrodes with deuterium and claimed to have seen excess heat and
particles that could be interpreted as by-products of nuclear fusion. This
process was dubbed “cold fusion” and was touted in the popular press as a
solution to the world’s energy problems – if only it was…

Fusion normally occurs at extremely high temperatures and therefore it was
very difficult to understand how the nuclei could overcome the considerable
electrostatic repulsion in order to fuse. A popular explanation at the time
was that the positive charges of deuterium nuclei within a solid such as
palladium were screened by the negatively charged electrons in the metal,
thereby allowing two nuclei to get close enough to fuse.

Like the hundreds of others worldwide, my little experiment found no
evidence for cold fusion. With the exception of a few diehard enthusiasts,
interest in cold fusion has since withered. Indeed, for physicists of my
generation, the cold-fusion saga was a public embarrassment and an example
of “bad science” – so much so that even legitimate investigations into its
possibility are still viewed by many with scorn.

Fleischmann died on Friday at the age of 85 in England, where he had
arrived from his native Czechoslovakia in 1938. I find it sad to think that
things could have been so very different for him – and humanity – if he had
indeed discovered cold fusion.

Posted by Hamish Johnston
<http://physicsworld.com/blog/hamish_johnston/>on Aug 6, 2012 5:33 PM


Axil



On Sun, Aug 12, 2012 at 3:25 AM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote:

> Krivit somehow put himself front and center in this one too! He has a
> talent for self-promotion. See:
>
>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/12/science/martin-fleischmann-cold-fusion-seeker-dies-at-85.html
>
> Not bad.
>
> - Jed
>

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