We don't but we also don't know for sure that magic fairy dust can't exist. Everyone should have a marker somewhere on the unlikely scale that says "BS".Which does assume we know every process out there. We don't.
As long as that marker doesn't write over the word imagination... I'm just sayin'We don't but we also don't know for sure that magic fairy dust can't exist. Everyone should have a marker somewhere on the unlikely scale that says "BS".
IMO cold fusion is a modern version of the The Turk. A fantastic facade of electrochemical gears, nuclear levers and pseudoscience designed to misdirect by a “secret mix” of catalyst with the power of a supernova and none of the radiation.As long as that marker doesn't write over the word imagination... I'm just sayin'
I'd be willing to spend more if the proponents could actually show there IS an anomaly, in the sense of a science anomaly instead of an experimental one. You need good equipment and good experiments before you can rule out established science. But it always seems like the good labs with good researchers and good equipment can't find these elusive phenomenon.... the big Q here would be, "how much time and resources are you willing to spend investigating this sort of anomaly?"
Is it really that dangerous?As I've said before, the claim that this experiment was a form of "fusion" -IE- a nuclear process that released energy is absurd.
Nuclear fusion releases gamma radiation which has an extremely short wavelength and is extremely hazardous. So if it was nuclear fusion, the experimenters would not be around long enough to brag about it.
Easy, make a working device that independent researchers can reproduce. Until then, it's just the same old BS.
Agreed ... but she's also right in that research should continue, if only to actually prove that it will never work ...Easy, make a working device that independent researchers can reproduce. Until then, it's just the same old BS.
Nobody has stopped actual research but there have been Cold Fusion Con-Men that needed to be stopped.Agreed ... but she's also right in that research should continue, if only to actually prove that it will never work ...
Back when Pons and Fleischmann first made their announcement, I was an undergrad in physics and a couple of the faculty who specialized in solid state and nuclear physics jump on the wagon to try to replicate the results. I was talking to one of them and he said that there was clearly some interesting physics going on that couldn't be readily explained, but it wasn't fusion in any meaningful sense.
It's amazing what could change if hot fusion ever goes commercial. It would surely be the best thing ever invented in the history of mankind.The whole sordid tale is detailed in this book by Gary Taubes:
Bad Science: The Short Life and Weird Times of Cold Fusion