Pressure on poor at Copenhagen led to failure | Bernarditas de Castro Muller guardian.co.uk (blog) Ponds and Fleishman may have been wrong about cold fusion, but they were at least real scientists. They did their experiments, published the results and ... and more »
Wed, Dec 23 | from The Observer Blog
In practice, I've found culinary fusion a lot like nuclear fusion. While it happens naturally all the time, humans have yet to make it happen in any useful ...
Tue, Dec 22 | from Colorado Springs Gazette
Next Big Future (blog) Update from the Latest Cold Fusion Conference Next Big Future (blog) These results indicate that the reacted gas of “solid nuclear fusion" can serve as a source of helium production. * Gas loading experiments similar to Arata ...
Sun, Dec 20 | from Next Big Future
CETI powercell/Widom-larsen theory OmniNerd (blog) By the way, I want to poin out a theory that explains cold fusion,while fitting in the Standard model. It is called Widom-larsen theory, GOOGLE IT.
Thu, Nov 12 | from omninerd.com
mckubre says he has seen that energy more than 50 times in cold fusion experiments he's doing at SRI International, a respected California lab that does extensive work for the government. mckubre is an electro-chemist who imagines, in 20 years, ...
Tue, Apr 21 | from WorldChanging: Tools, Models and Ideas for Building a Bright Green Future
MO Duncan will discuss “cold fusion,” a sort-of lower-energy nuclear reaction that can be done on a tabletop and produces heat. About 20 years ago, researchers at the University of Utah conducted an experiment that involved electrolysis on “heavy water” ...
Sun, Apr 19 | from Columbia Daily Tribune
At the present time, using the approaches described above, and thanks in large part to these unique relationships, Energetics Technologies is able to produce excess heat in a significant percentage of the experiments. Extraordinary breakthroughs have ...
Thu, Apr 16 | from Next Big Future
If room temperature fusion reactions could be realized commercially, as Fleischmann and Pons claimed to have achieved inside an electrolytic cell, it promised to produce abundant nuclear energy from deuterium — heavy hydrogen — extracted from seawater ...
Tue, Apr 14 | from ThomasNet Industrial News Room
DC Mr. Seife also delivers an entertaining account of the cold-fusion fiasco unleashed by chemists Stanley Pons and Martin Fleishman. He cites fusion scientist Leonid Ponomarev as explaining why credulity in the cold-fusion fantasy could advance as far as ...
Mon, Apr 6 | from Washington Times
Each deuterium nucleus with one proton and one neutron would couple with another nucleus to create a helium nucleus with two protons and two neutrons, plus extra energy that could be harvested for human use. Pons and Fleischmann's glass percolator used ...
Sun, Mar 22 | from Wired News
France - Dec 12, 2008 In 1989, Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons claimed to have achieved fusion at low temperatures (so-called cold fusion), effectively bottling a star on a ...
Sun, Dec 21 | from International Herald Tribune
PA - Dec 1, 2008 The initial 1989 claim, made by Fleischmann and Pons, was that a new kind of nuclear reactions can result from a chemical process, such as electrolysis. ...
Mon, Dec 1 | from OpEdNews
We’ve all seen the commercials talking about how technology was all going to be about flying cars and cold fusion. In reality, though, we have our very own science-fiction-turned-fact in looking at hybrid vehicles which are taking over. They truly are efficient and are money-saving at so...
Mon, Oct 20 | from Car Reviews
The original reports of cold fusion in an electrolytic cell in 1989 were met with rejection and ridiculing by most mainstream scientists. Since that time cold fusion has been amply confirmed by replicated experiments, and the phenomenon is by now recognized as something real by steadil...
Sun, Oct 19 | from Artipot
What is "cold fusion?" Is it real? What promises for humanity does it hold? What would happen if a free, non-polluting energy source was released into the world? How would our lives be different? What would be the reaction of the oil and nuclear industry infrastructure? Would it meekly st...
Sun, Sep 28 | from YouTube
13 things that don’t make sense by Michael Brooks is a pretty interesting look into the world of scientific discoveries, or lack thereof. Because, you see, there are quite a few commonplace things that we take for granted, but cannot quite explain from the scientific point of view. Sure, yo...
Wed, Aug 27 | from alex.moskalyuk
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