wrote:
> I think the reporter is utterly confused. I saw nothing in the article that
> wasn't related to hot fusion, other than the words "cold fusion".
>
Ah, ha! There were 4 other words. It says "'cold fusion,' or a
low-temperature nuclear reaction." That's LENR, another
I think there was sonoluminescent nuclear reaction with neutron production
experments at Pacific Northwest Labs and ORNL as recently as 3 years ago.
The researcher at PNL was G. Posakony who passed away about 2 years ago. I
read two draft papers by Posakony and a colleague at ORNL on the
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Mon, 12 Feb 2018 14:34:21 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
>JonesBeene wrote:
>
>
>> Rusi Taleyarkhan was working at ORNL some years ago therefore - they are
>> probably referring to sonofusion
>>
>
>Possibly, but it is present tense. The lab "is
JonesBeene wrote:
> Rusi Taleyarkhan was working at ORNL some years ago – therefore - they are
> probably referring to sonofusion
>
Possibly, but it is present tense. The lab "is trying."
There was some other research there long ago.
- Jed
Jed
Rusi Taleyarkhan was working at ORNL some years ago – therefore - they are
probably referring to sonofusion
Jones
From: Jed Rothwell
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kensilverstein/2018/02/12/nuclear-fusion-could-be-a-silver-bullet-and-just-around-the-corner/#448cc3ac3747
QUOTE:
Another
I asked the Forbes author about this.
- Jed
Google Alerts brought me this:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kensilverstein/2018/02/12/nuclear-fusion-could-be-a-silver-bullet-and-just-around-the-corner/#448cc3ac3747
QUOTE:
Another publicly-financed one is by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
> which is trying to figure out “cold fusion,” or
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