home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Message 9 6/17/94 0:25
- Subject: Cold Fusion - more stuff
- From: Duncan M. Roads
- To: Science Files
-
-
- (word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
- Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
- Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
- PO BOX 1031
- Mesquite, TX 75150
-
- There are ABSOLUTELY NO RESTRICTIONS
- on duplicating, publishing or distributing the
- files on KeelyNet!
-
- May 5, 1991
-
- COLDFUS2.ASC
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
- This file courteously supplied to KeelyNet by Mike Vest.
- [More]
-
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
- The following was taken off of the National Science Echo from
- Fidonet. Someone should call Mills Technology, and see if we can
- get their paper now.. Onward, Resonant Warriors... Mike Vest
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
-
- Cold Fusion Lecture - broad new theory
-
- WASHINGTON (UPI) ╤ Two physicists said Thursday they had developed
- a theory that could explain some of the puzzling phenomena
- persistently produced by disputed ``cold fusion'' experiments.
-
- The experiments did not produce excess energy through nuclear
- fusion, but instead by a new type of nuclear reaction that
- scientists say could possibly harness to produce power, said
- Michigan physicists Frederick Mayer and John Reitz.
-
- The reaction may result from production of a new type of particle
- dubbed a ``hydron,'' which could interract with metal to produce a
- nuclear reaction at room temperature, they said.
-
- The pair described the theory at a news conference in Boston, one
- [More]
-
- day after presenting a paper published in the Journal of Fusion
- Technology at a seminar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- in Cambridge, Mass.
-
- Lawrence Lidsky, a nuclear engineer at MIT who attended the seminar,
- said the theory was interesting but needed to be confirmed by
- experiments.
-
- '`Nobody ran out of the room screaming, 'He's got it,''' Lidsky
- said. ``It's interesting but the theory makes a lot of assumptions
- and requires several leaps of faith.''
-
- One of the appealing aspects of the theory, however, is that it
- should be able to be tested fairly easily, he said.
-
- ``There are some nifty tests that could be done to see if the theory
- is correct or not that should be fairly definitive,'' he said.
-
- Meanwhile, Mills Technologies of Lancaster, Pa., (see COLDFUS1.ZIP
- on KeelyNet) also held a news conference Thursday to claim the
- ``cold fusion'' results were actually from a non-nuclear reaction
- that produces energy through the contraction of hydrogen atoms.
- [More]
-
-
- Company president Randell Mills said Fusion Technology had agreed to
- publish a paper describing his work, which would be presented at a
- meeting of the American Chemical Society in New York in August.
-
- Chemists B. Stanley Pons and Norman Fleischmann created a worldwide
- uproar in 1989 when they announced that they had produced nuclear
- fusion in a simple experiment at room temperature at the University
- of Utah.
-
- Scientists had thought enormous pressure and very high temperatures
- would be needed to produce fusion ╤ the reaction that powers the
- sun that researchers have been trying to harness as an energy
- source.
-
- Pons and Fleischmann's claims largely have been discredited. But
- some scientists have continued to report detecting hints of a
- possible nuclear reaction produced by the experiments that they
- could not explain.
-
- Pons and Fleischmann's experiment involved running electricity
- through jars containing rods made of the metal palladium and a form
- [More]
-
- of water that has an extra hydrogen atom.
-
- The pair theorized the electrical current drove deuterium atoms in
- the water into the palladium until the deuterium became so tightly
- packed the atoms fused ╤ releasing excess energy.
-
- In the new theory, deuterium could react with metals like palladium
- to form unstable neutral particles dubbed ``hydrons,'' which then
- could react with the palladium in a nuclear reaction that produces
- excess heat.
-
- ``What he's saying is people were looking for the wrong reaction.
- It's not a form of fusion but a form of nuclear reaction,'' Lidsky
- said.
-
- ``If it were true, it would explain a number of phenomena that are
- puzzling,'' he said, adding: ``Can you use this to make power? Lord
- knows.'' Mayer is president of Mayer Applied Research Inc. in Ann
- Arbor.
-
- Reitz is an Ann Arbor consultant who taught physics at Case Western
- Reserve University from 1954 to 1965.
- [More]
-
-
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
-
- Cold Fusion Lecture
- broad new theory Theory Suggests Cold Fusion May Be Real
- by John Travis
-
- Perhaps rewakening a controversy which stunned the world over two
- years ago, a Michigan physicist yesterday at MIT presented a broad
- new theory that may explain the sporadic and puzzling results of
- cold fusion experiments, as well addressing other intriguing
- problems such as excess planetary heat and the presence of tritium
- in volcanic emissions.
-
- In 1989, two Utah chemists shocked the scientific community with
- their announcement of room-temperature fusion-in-a-bottle.
-
- Attempts to duplicate the experiment proved largely unsuccessful,
- prompting most researchers to dimiss the original report and the few
- others that followed as incorrect. Still, in the face of strong
- skepticism and even disdain from the majority of physicists, a small
- band of believers have continued to experiment and have reported
- [More]
-
- some unusual results.
-
- Speaking before a small audience at a lecture sponsored by MIT's
- Laboratory for Nuclear Science, Dr. Frederic J. Mayer, a plasma
- physicist with his own company in Ann Arbor, MI, detailed a paper,
- appearing in next month's issue of Fusion Technology, that attempts
- to explain the experimental inconsistencies that have been observed
- over the past 24 months.
-
- Fusion, the process which powers the sun, has a number of
- established pathways, the most common being the collison of two
- hydrogen atoms which produces a helium atom and a burst of energy,
-
- However, this new theory bypasses fusion reactions and proposes a
- novel energy-producing nuclear reaction that involves a new class of
- atomic particles not yet directly detected.
-
- Mayer's paper, co-authored with theoretical physicist Dr. John R.
- Reitz, suggests that the excess heat and other nuclear products
- detected in various cold fusion experiments are not the result of
- fusion, but instead a reaction involving an isotope switch.
-
- [More]
-
- Isotopes are atoms that are chemically identical, but have different
- numbers of neutrons. For example, carbon has a number of isotopes.
- A carbon atom may have up to twelve or more neutrons in its various
- isotopic forms.
-
- An isotope that is stripped of a neutron, or picks ups one, can
- often release energy. These reactions, which Mayer calls Resonant
- Direct Nuclear Reactions, may be the explanation for the cold fusion
- phenomenon, according to the new theory.
-
- There are a number of these isotope reactions, many of them occuring
- in metals that have been accused of contaminating cold fusion
- experiments. Since the level of contamination can vary widely, Mayer
- suggests this may be one explanation for the irreproducibity of many
- experiments.
-
- "The primary nuclear actions are not the conventional d-d fusion
- reactions, but are RDNRs," Mayer told the gathered audience, "The
- contaminants are driving the system."
-
- Mayer divides the RDNRs into two categories, tritium producers and
- tritium consumers. Tritium is an extremely rare isotope of the
- [More]
-
- hydrogen atom which normally has a single proton.
-
- (An isotope is one of two or more nuclides that have the same
- number of protons in their nuclei.
- Atomic hydrogen has one electron and one proton, the two
- "normal" isotopes of hydrogen are Deuterium (mass number 2,
- also known as HEAVY WATER) and Tritium (mass number
- 3 and radiocative)......Vangard)
-
- Tritium, in addition to the positively charged proton, has two extra
- neutrons in the nucleus and has been accused of being another
- contaminant in the experiments.
-
- In Mayer's isotope switch, tritium is converted to deuterium,
- another form of hydrogen that has a single neutron plus the proton,
- or vice-versa.
-
- When tritium is transformed into deuterium, a freed neutron is
- available for a metal atom, creating two isotope switches overall.
-
- The metal, perhaps platinum or uranium, can also lose a neutron,
- allowing a deuterium atom to be converted to tritium. It is the
- [More]
-
- isotope switch in the metals that release the excess energy.
-
- While the process appears simple and obvious, there is an obstacle
- most physicists thought prevented such nuclear reactions╤the
- Coulomb barrier.
-
- This barrier is similar to the repulsion that magnets can have with
- each other and occurs when particles of similar charge are brought
- together. The tritium, or deuterium, must be very close to the metal
- atoms before they can trade neutrons.
-
- Yet, the positive proton is repulsed by the large number of
- similarly charged protons in the metal atoms and the reactions are
- prevented from occuring.
-
- But, as Mayer explains in the most controversial part of the new
- theory, the proton in the the tritium or deuterium can be
- neutralized, which allows the atoms to evade the Coulomb barrier and
- procede with their resonant direct nuclear reactions (RDNRs).
-
- To perform this magic, Mayer and Reitz have theorized a new class of
- particles they call "hydrons" or virtual particles (the second name
- [More]
-
- is avoided since it has been used for other atomic particles as
- well).
-
- According to Mayer, a hydron is an unstable, compact neutral
- particle that sometimes occurs when an electron interacts with a
- proton.
-
- In effect, the electron and proton cancel each other out, creating a
- "virtual" neutron. If the proton in tritium can be neutralized in
- this way, the Coulumb barrier would no longer be an impediment and
- the nuclear reactions would occur.
-
- However, these hydrons have not been directly observed and many in
- the audience were unconvinced that such a proton-electron
- interaction could exist. Mayer could offer only indirect evidence
- for the hydrons, but pointed out they provided the best explanation
- for the variety of experimental data.
-
- "Small compact objects that are neutral appear from the data to be
- present in nature," said Mayer, "A compact object like this could
- solve a lot of problems."
-
- [More]
-
- The absence of certain helium isotopes and gamma radiation have been
- key arguments against cold fusion proponents, since the two are
- typically produced in the accepted fusion pathways.
-
- However, the new theory offers numerous routes in which no radiation
- would be expected, and none of the reactions would produce helium.
-
- This fact may help solve another, older mystery involving the Earth
- itself. Only about half of the earth's interior energy, geothermal
- heat, can be accounted for from measurements of helium.
-
- Mayer suggested these new reactions may account for the extra heat,
- as well as explaining why the ratio of helium isotopes is different
- for geothermal gases than the ratio found in the galaxy. Jupiter,
- which emits twice as much heat as can be explained presently, is
- another area where hydrons may be involved.
-
- Observations of volcanic emissions have also been found to have
- large anounts of tritium, more than can be explained from the normal
- fusion rate at the volcanoe's temperature. Tritium-producing RDNRs
- may explain the excess, according to Mayer.
-
- [More]
-
- The broad scope of the theory is one the reasons it is so
- attractive, said Mayer. It is not just limited to explaining cold
- fusion phenomenon, but many other scientific puzzles.
-
- In fact, the strongest evidence for the new theory may come from
- other fusion experiments at Brookhaven National Laboratory.
-
- Scientists there are studying a process known as Cluster Impact
- Fusion in which they shoot deuterium atoms at titanium foil. Charged
- particles measured during the experiment appear to match one of the
- isotope reactions proposed by Mayer and Reitz.
-
- Another puzzle that may back-up the new theory is the diffusivity of
- hydrogen into metals. This is a well-recognized problem that
- embrittles the metals.
-
- The hydrons, in addition to being neutral, would be extremely small
- and could seep into metals much more effectively than similar atoms
- like oxygen or nitrogen. Since the hydrons are short-lived, they
- would convert back ("go normal" in Mayer's words) taking up a larger
- volume. And since the hydrons are now inside the metal, this
- increase could cause cracking, a possible explanation for the
- [More]
-
- metal's brittleness.
-
- Mayer's audience at the lecture included Peter Hagelstein, a
- theoretician at MIT who had provided one of the first possible
- explanations for cold fusion almost two years ago.
-
- While intrigued with the new theory, Hagelstein was not yet
- persuaded that hydrons could exist. The mathematical proof of them
- would be difficult, he said.
-
- Mayer agreed but pointed out one of the benefits of the hydron
- explanation was a number of obvious experimental tests that could be
- done to either support or contradict the theory. Repeating some of
- the cold fusion experiments, with deliberate and controlled
- contamination of the metals, would be an excellent start, according
- to Mayer.
- Concluding his lecture, Mayer answered what he said was the most
- obvious question ╤ does the theory suggest a large scale nuclear
- energy source. While refusing to speculate on the actual method,
- Mayer simply responded, "I think there is."
-
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
- [More]
-
-
- If you have comments or other information relating to such topics
- as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
- Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
- Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.
-
- Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
- Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
-
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
- If we can be of service, you may contact
- Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 242-9346
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
-
-
- Commands: Help,Logout,Exit,Read,New,Home,Delete,Scan,Send,Reply,Forward.
- >
- Home:The Akashic Records:Science Files: 18 Messages.
- Commands: Help,Logout,Exit,Read,New,Home,Delete,Scan,Send,Reply,Forward.
- > 10
- Message 10 6/17/94 0:23
- Subject: Cold Fusion
- From: Duncan M. Roads
- To: Science Files
-
-
- (word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
- Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
- Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
- PO BOX 1031
- Mesquite, TX 75150
-
- There are ABSOLUTELY NO RESTRICTIONS
- on duplicating, publishing or distributing the
- files on KeelyNet!
-
- May 1, 1991
-
- COLDFUS1.ASC
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
- This interesting file uploaded to KeelyNet courtesy of
- [More]
-
- Jim Shaffer.
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
- From the Williamsport, PA _Sun-Gazette_, April 25 1991:
-
- FIRM CLAIMS COLD FUSION MYSTERY SOLVED
-
- Lancaster Company's Assertion Disputed
-
- SALT LAKE CITY (AP) ╤ A Pennsylvania company claims to have solved
- the puzzle of cold fusion.
-
- Mills Technologies, of Lancaster, Pa., claims to have determined a
- non-nuclear mechanism for the purported phenomenon reported at the
- University of Utah two years ago. Mills also says it has made the
- effect reproducible.
-
- The company attributes the effect to a previously unknown reaction
- that creates a new, smaller form of hydrogen.
-
- The explanation disputes much of the quantum mechanical theory that
- has guided nuclear scientists most of this century, and was greeted
- with some skepticism by other scientists.
- [More]
-
-
- "Basically, we have both the theoretical and practical aspects
- solved," Mills' owner, Randell L. Mills, said in a telephone
- interview Wednesday.
-
- The company scheduled a news conference in Lancaster today.
-
- Mills said his company of about a half-dozen employees has built its
- own cells that have produced up to 40 times the electrical energy
- put in.
-
- He also said the heat production works with ordinary water as well
- as heavy water, and it does not require a palladium electrode.
-
- University of Utah researchers Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann
- stumbled on to the process "by serendipity" and they were wrong in
- their assumption that nuclear reactions were creating the excess
- heat, Mills said.
-
- But since hydrogen from ordinary water is the fuel, the prospects
- for use as an energy source are still very good, he said.
- Mills also said the effect is "100 percent reproducible" and the
- [More]
-
- company has applied for patents worldwide. Reproducibility has been
- a major hindrance in the acceptance of the phenomena.
-
- Under the theory, the electrons in hydrogen atoms drop to previously
- unknown energy levels below the "ground state" thought to be the
- lowest level under conventional quantum mechanics. Dropping to
- these lower levels requires a release of energy as heat.
-
- A paper is to be published in the August issue of the Journal of
- Fusion Technology, where a number of cold-fusion-related articles
- have appeared, Mills said. He will speak on the work at the August
- meeting of the American Chemical Society in New York City.
-
- Fritz Will, director of the National Cold Fusion Institute at the
- University of Utah, was out of the country. Haven Bergeson, who
- directs the physics group for the institute, said he was unfamiliar
- with Mills and his work and could not comment on its specifics.
-
- "On the surface, it seems like an unlikely idea," Bergeson said.
- "It's a line of thinking that I don't think any of us have
- followed."
-
- [More]
-
- John Huizenga, a University of Rochester nuclear chemist who co-
- chaired the Department of Energy's cold-fusion review panel, said he
- also knew nothing of the work, but thought it difficult to take the
- claim seriously at this point.
-
- Huizenga, who has previously said that cold fusion would require "a
- succession of miracles," said the Mills work appears to be more
- willingness to surrender a well-accepted and proven theory for the
- sake of sketchy experimental evidence.
-
- "When surprise upon surprise upon surprise comes along, one has to
- be very careful," he said.
-
- Mills said his company was formed in 1986 as a research-oriented
- business. He said his background includes a bachelor's degree in
- chemistry and a medical degree from Harvard University. He also
- studied electrical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of
- Technology.
-
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
-
- If you have comments or other information relating to such topics
- [More]
-
- as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
- Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
- Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.
-
- Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
- Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
-
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
- If we can be of service, you may contact
- Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 242-9346
- ╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤╤
-
- Commands: Help,Logout,Exit,Read,New,Home,Delete,Scan,Send,Reply,Forward.
-