sbkrivit

Dec 302011
 

By “Greg from Tennessee”

It seems as though the tide is turning towards the concepts of weak interactions and collective effects and away from the three miracles that have always been assumed by the cold fusioneers (to steal Lewis Larsen’s phrase).

It looks like at least some LENR researchers may be trying to catch one of the last waves before the tide leaves them out at sea. If they can gain acceptance by marrying their old terminology with Larsen’s theories, after years of suppressing his theories for fear of the destruction of theirs, then maybe they can stay relevant.

What is so sad is that many of these folks did some good work in the past showing impressive evidence of excess heat but could never explain it. Many of these people are brilliant! If more of them had simply been willing to stay open minded in 2005, when a serious explanation had been given, especially since they had not found sound explanations themselves, the discipline would have been far ahead of where it is today. In such a scenario, they would have all been in the mix moving forward. I don’t understand the decision by many of them to stay in denial so long when nothing long-term could possibly have been gained from it. It’s not too late for these folks, but they’re going to have to renounce the concept of fusion and start looking at other possibilities.

You can only omit, suppress, and deceive for so long when your ideas, theories, and philosophies have no possible way of moving the science forward. Eventually, the scientific community, sponsors, and funding agencies will see that you’ve made no progress. The resource-holders will start looking at fresh concepts to explain phenomena. I think that’s where we’re headed.

Dec 302011
 

Source: Randyhekman20112.com

Energy: America’s Next ‘Space Race’

By Randy Hekman – Thursday, December 29, 2011

America’s economic growth is strongly related to our access to low-cost energy sources. During the past 14 years, I have been studying a promising area of energy creation called Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (LENR). I devoted three of those years to full time direct research in a lab. Fortunately, I had only one tiny (non-nuclear!) explosion when a small amount of hydrogen gas ignited in my laboratory.

This area of LENR began with a bang itself in 1989 when researchers in Utah, Stanley Pons and Martin Fleishmann, claimed to have created nuclear fusion at room temperatures on a tabletop. Called at the time “cold fusion,” this announcement caused a great stir among scientists worldwide. While some research facilities were able to replicate the “cold fusion” findings, most facilities could not. But, ultimately, the scientific community was nearly unanimous in saying that known principles of physics would not allow fusion to occur at room temperatures on a tabletop.

Despite this scientific consensus,  a sizable group of researchers from around the globe continued their experiments and kept documenting anomalous results that were consistent with a nuclear process occurring. How could this be?

It took a man I met at a conference in France five years ago to discover the answer.  Lewis Larsen, now CEO of Lattice Energy LLC in Chicago, looked at the voluminous data from the many experiments and together with a partner, Dr. Allan Widom of Northeastern University, developed a theory now called the Widom-Larsen theory. This theory explains the data in ways that are totally consistent with accepted concepts of science. Their conclusion: LENR is neither fission nor fusion but is still nuclear. It also has the potential of providing energy for a wide variety of applications at low cost but without harmful radiation or leaving harmful residue. Leading physicists from NASA concur that this theory best explains the data and believe the potential is so great as to ultimately grow into a trillion dollar industry. For more information on this theory, see a website developed by a friend of mine who has been reporting on this area for a number of years:

http://newenergytimes.com/v2/sr/WL/WLTheory.shtml

So where do we go from here? The temptation is to look to Washington, but I totally disagree. The US Department of Energy (DoE) has a very dismal record in picking winners and losers in the energy area. We do not need more Solyndras. In fact, I support elimination of this department and allowing private investment and market forces to drive new energy technologies like LENR. I fully expect adventuresome private investors will support Lewis Larsen whom I believe has the knowledge base to turn good theory into good, useful technology.

This is a new, potentially trillion dollar industry that has the ability to solve our nation’s energy crisis, secure our country by not depending on foreign oil and turn America into an energy and technology exporter. Scientists in China and India are hard at work developing this technology and attempting to bring it to market. We cannot be left behind in our generation’s space race.

We need America to be the world leader in solving our energy crisis. And I believe we have the ability to make it happen.

Dec 292011
 

Yesterday, I published “Hagelstein Knew: It’s Not Fusion.” Today, a low-energy nuclear researcher responded. We had the following e-mail exchange which has been lightly edited:

Dennis Cravens: I understand your insistence to say it is not fusion. You assert that deuterium-to-helium-type fusion is the only kind of fusion there can be. However, I personally believe LENR is fusion because a nucleus is going to a higher mass. That is fusion.

It does not matter if it is a neutron adding to a nucleus or a deuteron adding to a nucleus or by what pathway you get there. If a nucleus goes to a higher mass, it is fusion. Going to a higher mass is fusion, going to smaller mass is fission.

I define fusion as “a nuclear reaction in which a nucleus undergoes a change to a more massive nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy.” It is not pathway dependent.

I also don’t think that MeVs of energy represent “low energy.” I also think that anything below a million K is cold in nuclear terms. kT<< nuclear binding energy.

Krivit: You have been researching LENR for most of the past 22 years. You are also a professor of physics and chemistry. Nevertheless, in physics, “neutron addition” is called “neutron capture,” not “nuclear fusion.”

The core of the historical argument and controversy of “cold fusion” is the hypothesis that by some miracle, deuterons are somehow overcoming the Coulomb barrier at room temperature. In physics, beta decays and inverse beta decays rely on the weak force. Fusion processes rely on the strong force.

Now that a potentially viable theory has finally arrived, albeit not a fusion theory, you, McKubre, and other researchers in the field want to change physics terminology. I do not think for a moment that anybody outside the cold fusion ghetto (Charles Beaudette’s term) will take such attempts seriously. I think such attempts will only bring more disrespect to the field. I see your attempt to redefine terminology of nuclear mechanisms after the game has been played similar to MIT’s 1989 experimental effort to change their baseline after they ran their experiment and – oops! – measured a few milliWatts of excess heat.

Have you thought your strategy through carefully and independently? And if so, are your ideas about nuclear terminology truly representative of your approach to science and specifically to LENR research?

Wouldn’t it be better just to say, “Maybe we were wrong about the fusion idea, but we nailed it with our measurements of excess heat, helium, tritium, transmutations, alphas, neutrons, etc.”?

Would it help if I reminded you what the co-discoverer of “cold fusion,” Martin Fleischmann, said to me last year?

“Well, fusion has a special meaning in the scientific literature – hot fusion – and perhaps it was a mistake to call this process fusion.” Fleischmann said. “It should have been called a nuclear effect, you see.”

You ask why I am so insistent on the correct use of terminology. I think it is the honest thing to do. Apparently, so did Martin. I also think that the field will not achieve real progress until people see what nature is showing, rather than what they want to see. More importantly, the field will not achieve the recognition it deserves until its proponents can prove to observers that they are trustworthy.

Cravens: (Excerpt) You have not yet offered your definition of fusion. Offer your general definition of fusion.

Krivit: It less important how I define fusion. It is more important what you and the rest of the LENR community have put forward for 22 years as fusion: D+D -> 4He.

And now a new model arrives: e + p -> n + v;  n + x -> y and you want to call the process whereby a neutron is created, and/or the process where a neutron is captured by a nearby nucleus “fusion.” If this is where you wish to go, you have every right to proceed as you wish. But I will not follow you.

I answered your question about definitions a year and a half ago: http://newenergytimes.com/v2/news/2010/35/SR35908neutroncapture.shtml

[Round 2]

Cravens: Why do you think these things are “Low Energy” and not fusion at low (kT<< Mev’s) temperatures?

Krivit: I have explained this many times, starting with my 2008 ACS presentation (PresentationAudio) and other New Energy Times publications. This material has been available for three and a half years. Do you have a specific question about what I wrote and said in my presentation?

Cravens: LENR is not an accurate term from what I see in the lab.  The energy must be many times any possible chemical event and likely in the Mev’s.

Krivit: We do not disagree on the levels of produced energy. And judging by the papers and discussions at the NASA Glenn workshop, or the 2004 DoE Review of LENR, or the 2006 DTRA Workshop, I do not think the word “low” discourages people from appreciating the potential of LENR, so this does not seem to be an argument that is worth nitpicking about.

Cravens: The point is that I do not think that your approach to condemn the use of the term “fusion” based on an assumed theoretical model is useful to the field. Especially if that model admits it is a merger of several items into one.  I feel it would be much better to allow people to use the terms they are comfortable with. Let people use dozens of terms if they like.  Let history decide what term sticks after another 20 years or so.   It is better to view terms and other people as how their statements can be true instead of trying to force others to use your terms and then assume others wrong. Nature does not care what we call these events.

Krivit: You seem very confused.

First, it is not just one “assumed theoretical model.” There is a larger picture that I see; many people have speculated weak-interactions. Widom-Larsen just seems the best one so far.

Second, please remember that our conversation started when you approached me about terminology, not the other way around.

Third, this is what I wrote: “If this is where you wish to go, you have every right to proceed as you wish. But I will not follow you.”

Restated more clearly: If you wish to continue calling it cold fusion, go right ahead.

Cravens: I am afraid that you are slowly alienating yourself from many within the field (use what ever terms you wish for it).  You seem to be picking sides for terms and theoretical viewpoints instead of remaining “journalistically neutral”.   I hope that you professional journalistic style will eventually return you to a neutral position before your audience evaporates. My un-asked for advise is to ease off the attacks on individuals and semantics. —- Just saying that as a “friend”.

Krivit: Thank you for your “friendly” concern about me alienating myself from people who believe in cold fusion. Fortunately I have had some time to think about this because I have heard this exact comment for several years now. In fact, I began hearing it in 2008 from people who believe in cold fusion when I first began publishing news about the Widom-Larsen not-fusion theory. But you are correct. Some of my audience who are either unable or unwilling to allow their perspective to shift and change as the knowledge in the field shifts and changes will, in fact, walk away. That doesn’t worry me. Not a bit.

Let me speak about your comment about “journalistically neutral.” Remember where this conversation started. I wrote an article called “Hagelstein Knew: It’s Not Fusion.” This was very straightforward reporting. Then you began to ask me questions about my personal perspective. Of course, I responded with my personal opinions.

Now, the idea of “journalistically neutral” does not apply in all situations. I work hard to differentiate when I am reporting versus when I am being asked my opinion, either by someone like you, or by representatives of the federal government, or by business research firms, or by publishers to provide an expert (you may disagree) opinion. However, I am still willing to consider your comment. Can you please tell me in which article, in your opinion, I was not “journalistically neutral?” Was it the Hagelstein article or my response to you?

Dec 292011
 

Telephone Interview Conducted June 3, 2009

Excerpt:

Martin Fleischmann: It seemed to me that calling it fusion drew attention to the type of process which it could be, you see. It seemed reasonable to call it that at that time.

Steven B. Krivit: I suppose there was nothing else, to your awareness, from which to categorize it?

MF: Yes, it seems reasonable to have called it that, but perhaps one shouldn’t have called it that.

SK: Yeah, that seems understandable. I was wondering whether you had a chance to catch wind of the ideas in the last few years about neutron-catalyzed reactions?

MF: Yes, it must be. You know, the neutron is not very strongly bound in deuterium so maybe there is some substance to those thoughts.

 

 

Dec 282011
 

Since 1989, MIT professor Peter Hagelstein has been struggling to find a viable mechanism to explain LENR experiments. At last count, he said he had tried more than 150 models. Hagelstein has also been very critical of a weak interactions-based theory that was introduced in 2005 called the Widom-Larsen theory. For Lewis Larsen, the originator of the theory, their published theory represents his first and only model to explain LENRs.

Many theorists have attempted to explain “cold fusion” with complex mathematics and imaginary “new physics.” Larsen did not begin with mathematics; those aspects were added later. He began with an insight; he recognized a similarity between transmutation product spectra he saw in LENRs and spectra he had seen while taking courses in astrophysics (elemental abundances versus atomic mass.) Larsen can explain his concept without mathematics and in comparatively simple language.

According to Larsen, an ultra-low momentum neutron is created in LENRs and this is the key to the reactions. Because the neutron has ultra-low momentum, it does not travel outside the experiment; though spallation neutrons may. According to Larsen, his U.S. patent explains how gamma rays are suppressed and are not seen outside the experiment.

(Go to Widom-Larsen Theory Portal for more information.)
http://newenergytimes.com/v2/library/1994/1994HagelsteinColdFusionMagExcerpt.jpg
Photo credit: John F. Cook, Cold Fusion Magazine

In 1993, Hagelstein also recognized that weak interactions were the key to LENRs as New Energy Times wrote on July 30, 2010. Hagelstein, however, didn’t solve the riddle. New Energy Times has obtained a 1994 article written by Hagelstein that reveals his thought process.

A few things that Hagelstein knew:
– It could not be fusion.
– There was no way to get deuterons to fuse at room temperature.
– The only possible solution was to use a neutral particle like a neutron.

Something Hagelstein did not know:
– How a neutron might be created.

Here are some excerpts from Hagelstein’s article:
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My initial consideration led nowhere. There simply was no place to start. Fusion was conjectured, yet I concluded it could not be fusion. (I know that some of my theorist colleagues disagree on this point.) There was no way to get deuterons -the nuclei of deuterium – together. Even if deuterons somehow were able to get together, large numbers of neutrons and quantities of tritium would be generated along with heat, and this was not observed.

A reasonable response would have been to cross off fusion from the list and then proceed to whatever was next. The only problem was that there did not appear to be any “next.”

As was clear initially, there were two basic difficulties: (1) how to overcome the Coulomb barrier, and (2) how to couple the energy to the lattice. I was not able to find any satisfactory solution to the first problem, and ultimately concluded that the reactions, whatever they might be, could not be fusion reactions.

The only way to get around the problem of the Coulomb barrier, assuming optimistically that any way actually existed, is to work with reactions involving a charge-neutral system.

A number of prominent theorists had speculated that there might exist a heavy negatively-charged particle that could carry a proton or deuteron, effectively producing a neutral “particle” that could enter a positively charged nucleus. I did not believe that such particle existed on earth – preferentially in heavy water/palladium electrolysis experiments. Consequently, the only serious possibility seemed to be some kind of novel exotic reactions involving a neutron that would be transferred at a distance.

If a reaction is to involve a neutron transfer with a nucleus, it immediately becomes problematic as to where the neutron would come from. There seem to be no obvious source of real neutrons associated with the experiments; even if there were, real neutrons would lead to all kinds of nuclear emissions and activation of materials, effects not consistent with the experimental reports.
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