Sunil Shah <[email protected]> wrote:
> If the reactions are "few" there will be no heat measured, but the > reactions are nonetheless happening! Good grief, we already know measuring > heat is difficult.. > It is a lot easier than measuring isotopic shifts in picogram samples of material mixed in with grams of contamination. Bear in mind that radioactivity was first discovered by the heat it produces. > What I find a disturbing though, is that despite having pretty good > accounts of the constituent nuclei, nobody can figure out what the > reactions are! > Experts tell me they cannot figure this out because they do not have access to the instruments they need. These instruments costs a great deal of money. Barrels of money. Cold fusion research is done on a shoestring by superannuated professors. They are shut out of most universities and other labs. If people could measure transmutations, believe me, they would. They don't have the equipment, the expertise or the funding. - Jed

