Re: [Vo]:Index of papers at New Energy News

2009-07-14 Thread Jed Rothwell

I wrote:


Some of the paper cannot be read.


I meant that some of the Acrobat files cannot be read, so I did not 
index them. I don't know what's in 'em. Probably corrupted files.


Regarding the old editorials, #4 is here:

http://www.nytimes.com/1989/04/30/opinion/the-utah-fusion-circus.html?scp=1&sq=the%20utah%20fusion%20circus&st=cse

ENTIRE TEXT QUOTED:

April 30, 1989


The Utah Fusion Circus

For the last month, scientists around the world have been poised 
between deepest doubt and highest hope. The University of Utah 
claimed on March 23 that two researchers had learned how to fuse 
atomic nuclei at room temperature. Yet despite a month of attempts to 
repeat the Utah experiment, no one yet knows if the claim will 
evaporate in smoke and recrimination or prove the first step to a 
revolutionary new source of energy.


Conventional attempts to attain fusion rely on multimillion-dollar 
machines working at enormous temperatures. So it was thrilling to 
hear that Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann, with simple equipment 
and a mere $100,000 of their own money, had apparently attained 
fusion at room temperature by passing electric current through heavy 
water and a palladium electrode.


But the two apparently neglected a basic caution that scientists have 
learned to impose on themselves for fear of being carried away - a 
control experiment, like repeating the test with ordinary water 
instead of heavy water. The University of Utah encouraged them to 
hold a press conference when the report of their results had been 
submitted to Nature, a leading scientific journal, but not yet 
accepted by its editors. When the journal's referees raised 
criticisms, the authors said they were too busy to respond and 
withdrew the paper.


None of this means the claim is wrong, just that at present it 
totally lacks the guarantees of reasonable credibility that attach to 
research claims published in refereed journals. Given such nakedness, 
the University of Utah should be embarrassed indeed that many 
competent laboratories have been unable to repeat the 
Pons-Fleischmann experiment. Two teams that at first reported having 
done so later withdrew their claims. A rival group, at Brigham Young 
University in Utah, has now published a similar claim, but the few 
neutrons it reports as evidence of fusion may not greatly exceed 
those that occur naturally.


The claims of cold fusion could still turn out to be correct. And 
even if not, they have sparked scrutiny and theorizing that could 
lead others to a fruitful attack. But it's equally possible that some 
subtle experimental error or self-deception will prove to be the 
explanation. It's just such errors that the procedural safeguards of 
science are designed to catch. Imperfect though the safeguards are, 
they have saved many from the pitfalls of wishful thinking and overenthusiasm.


Last week Chase Peterson, president of the University of Utah, 
appeared before a House committee to drum up Federal funds. Asked how 
much, he replied, ''The figure that comes to mind is $25 million.'' 
Given the present state of evidence for cold fusion, the Government 
would do better to put the money on a horse.


For Mr. Pons and Mr. Fleischmann, the best bet is to disappear into 
their laboratory and devise a clearly defined, well-understood 
experiment that others can reproduce. Until they have that, they have 
nothing. As for the University of Utah, it may now claim credit for 
the artificial-heart horror show and the cold-fusion circus, two 
milestones at least in the history of entertainment, if not of science.




- Jed


[Vo]:Index of papers at New Energy News

2009-07-14 Thread Jed Rothwell
I went to sort out the Acrobat papers at New Energy News to see if 
there are any we should add to LENR-CANR.org. The papers are 
scattered around there and the filenames are somewhat chaotic. 
Anyway, I wrote a program to put them in order and generated this index:


http://lenr-canr.org/NewenergynewsIndex.htm

Not sure what I am going to do with this. It is really up to Steve.

I could add the Abstracts or format this as a table, the way 
LENR-CANR.org indexes are formatted.


Some of the paper cannot be read.

- Jed