|
|
| HOME | NEWS | CONFERENCES | CONVERSATIONS | LINKS | SUPPORT | ABOUT |
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PDF VERSION: http://newenergytimes.com/news/2008/NET27.pdf
__________________________________________________________________________________ New Energy Institute gratefully acknowledges the generosity and support of our major sponsors: New York Community Trust __________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
EDITORIALS AND OPINION By Steven B. Krivit
Only one U.S. government group, the Navy's SPAWAR San Diego (a different entity from the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C.), has published LENR papers (19) and does research openly. Some of the other government groups recently received internal funding to begin research, but they have been told not to publish. Is this a good thing for science? For the U.S.? Probably not. On the other hand, the science community in India has come to terms with the fact that it missed out on 14 years of research on LENR. Will science leaders in the U.S. and other nations take notice of India's newfound interest? Glowing articles about the LENR revival in India have been published in Nature India and New Energy Times. However, no journal papers from India have been published recently. In 1974, researchers at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre in Trombay, India, not-so-quietly unveiled a not-so-little secret: They had developed nuclear weapons technology. U.S. intelligence and the rest of the world was caught by surprise. Will India surprise the U.S. again with LENR?
Smart people in India understand science, technology, and innovation. And they have ambition and necessity, key ingredients for technological growth. But India has not always been a country rich in high technology. B.V. Sreekantan, a visiting professor at the National Institute of Advanced Studies and former director of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, "In the late 1940s and the early 1950s,” Sreekantan says, “India was industrially backward, and in the field of electronics, only had imported radio communication electronics available. There was no expertise on pulse electronics anywhere in the country. Even scientific books and journals took their time to reach India by sea, and the journals were almost a year old by the time these reached our libraries. “To work in this environment on advanced areas of nuclear physics and cosmic rays, and keep pace with our competitors in Europe and USA, was quite a challenge. ... A saving grace was the large availability of discarded electronic components ... left by the homebound U.S. and U.K. military services." India is obviously a latecomer to the technology game. One reason for this is its previous isolation from the West. Another reason is its unwillingness to subjugate its options for defense to appease other countries that have used nuclear weapons for nonpeaceful purposes. People in the West may have a tendency to think less of India's capabilities because of what they see on the surface. But folks in the West would be wise not to underestimate India's ability or wisdom. Just because India, statistically speaking, doesn't measure up to other more-developed countries or appear as technologically advanced does not mean that it lacks the capability or desire. Another reason for its underdeveloped state, perhaps the most significant, is that living simply is (at least until recently) a dominant cultural value. You don't need to talk an Indian into reducing, reusing and recycling; people there are practically born with what we called in the 1970s a conservation attitude and call now sustainability.
"The need to customize policies and goals for each country is illustrated by the difference between India and the U.S. in their approach to the fast breeder nuclear reactor,” he said. “India places a high value on reprocessing spent fuel to close the nuclear fuel cycle, because it has limited uranium reserves and the world's largest thorium reserves. Padmanabha Krishnagopala Iyengar, former director of BARC and former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission explained in a video interview in January how the U.S. and India utilize uranium-based fission technology differently. "[The U.S.] is burning less than one percent of the uranium that it mines," Iyengar said. "It is misleading the world." Iyengar said that India utilizes 99 percent of its uranium as fuel whereas the U.S. uses only one percent and stores the remainder as "waste" or uses the depleted uranium in military applications. In another slide from Chidambaram's presentation, he explains what he sees as a significant factor for his country's nuclear energy independence in the long run. Right now, India is highly dependent on foreign uranium for its reactors, but things could be markedly different in a few decades.
Photo Albums of India: __________________________________________________________________________________
2. To the Editor: Comments on Iyengar Video Interview __________________________________________________________________________________ NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS James "Doc" Patterson died on Feb. 11 after several days of illness related to a heart attack, according to one of his daughters, Mandy Davis. Patterson is also survived by daughters Sherrill and Valerie and son Vance. Patterson had been an early pioneer in cold fusion research and dared to go where few others were willing: using light water instead of heavy water in his experiments. Davis, who had worked with "Doc" in his LENR lab and also on his biomedical products, will follow through with the LENR patent applications and licensing agreement that were in process at the time of Patterson's passing. Davis mentioned a LENR cell that "Doc" had been working on—powered initially by solar photovoltaics—that was self-sustaining. "You might find it interesting to know that right up until the last couple of weeks of his life he was continuing to work on LENR," Davis said. "The world lost a pretty amazing mind." __________________________________________________________________________________ 4. My Recollections of Jim Patterson By Lawrence P.G. Forsley
I met with Jim and his grandson, Jim Reding, who regrettably died several years ago, in Dallas, Texas, to discuss what we might do together. Eventually, we licensed a specific technology and, with one of my electrochemist colleagues, began doing experiments in my friend's laboratory, at my lab in Annandale, Va., and in Jim Patterson’s “garage laboratory,” in Sarasota, Fla. I set out a goal for Jim, which he carried out and was even granted the patent on. I chose to not get involved with the patent application, because I didn’t believe his instrumentation reflected what the patent asserted. His lab in Sarasota was wonderful. It was the size of an oversized garage - or an undersized airplane hanger. It was a marvelous combination of 1950s technology coupled with the best of 19th century physics and chemistry. A modern day Faraday would have been right at home among the variety of ovens, wires, cables, chemicals, stirrers and more. There was even an office with a recliner that Jim liked to nap on, and a dog or two to keep an eye on things. I’d say we spent equal amounts of time talking about fishing, chemistry and eating and the rest of our time futzing in his lab. In between, we had many discussions about LENR, its prospects and the future. On one trip, Jim handed me one of his inventions: a spool of porous fiber for drip-feeding plants. Over dinner another night, I asked him about ketchup. This requires some explanation. I had learned from another colleague that Jim had made a name for himself while a graduate student many years earlier. Jim, while working for Dow Chemical, had patented the first of his beads as turbidity standards, used to measure the cloudiness of water. Another friend of mine had Jim's beads and found that the size distribution wasn’t "standard” enough, and as a result, they had an immediate falling out. But, on learning about the ketchup project from his grandson, (I'm getting to this) and realizing that Jim was “Dr. Plastic Bead,” I had a very unsettling thought. Had he devised a means to thicken ketchup by the addition of turbidity standard beads, I wondered? Had he used the nonstandard beads that failed to meet spec for use in the ketchup that I was eating? I was sure they were fit for human consumption, but ingesting multimicron-sized plastic beads just was not very appealing. With some trepidation, I asked Jim about this during dinner. “Jim," I said, "I understand you devised a means for thickening ketchup for one of the major food companies.” “Yup,” he answered. “Can you tell me how you did this?” I timidly asked. “Nope,” he replied. “Well, did you use polystyrene beads by any chance?” I asked with a low voice after I had just poured ketchup onto my french fries. “Ah, no,” he said. “I used freeze-dried tomatoes to make it thicker. No one would put polystyrene beads in ketchup. What gave you that idea?” “Just a thought,” I replied, as I happily consumed my french fries without fear. Jim and I continued to kibitz for a couple of years. At ICCF-7 in Vancouver, B.C., in 1997, I presented data from my experiments in which I had used Jim's beads. However, before that conference, Jim and I had a meeting in Washington, D.C., coinciding with an American Nuclear Society meeting. I had concluded, as I would state in my ICCF-7 talk, that I had seen no evidence of LENR-induced isotopic shifts from an analysis of gases, solids or electrolyte using nuclear activation analysis (NAA), high resolution inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP/MS) or x-ray fluorescence (XRF). Jim was quite irate when I said this. “I didn’t pay you to get those kind of results!” he said. “Jim, you didn’t pay me," I replied. "I paid you for a research license and for those damn beads!” Nonetheless, Jim’s passing was a great sadness to me. He was a prolific inventor, and I learned a great deal from him. His company’s decision not to sell its RIFEX intellectual property to Motorola for $10 million was thought at the time to be the height of idiocy. But Jim wanted to keep the ranch, right down to the last chicken. These thoughts are always with me as I look into my cloudy crystal ball. But at least I can enjoy my french fries and think fondly of Jim when I can’t get the ketchup out of the bottle. Take care, my friend! I hope the fishing is as good where you are now as it was in Sarasota. Otherwise, move back. __________________________________________________________________________________ 5. Conversations: Pioneers of and Contributors to Cold Fusion, CMNS /LENR New Energy Times is gradually building an index of many of the pioneers of cold fusion, CMNS/LENR. Yuri Bazhutov recently contributed several listings in remembrance of outstanding Russian scientists who had made a "substantial contribution into research of cold nuclear transmutation, a new field of scientific endeavor." The index can be found on the "Conversations" page of the New Energy Times Web site. __________________________________________________________________________________ 6. American Physical Society March 2008 Meeting For the 11th year a row, Scott Chubb has again championed the cause of cold fusion at the American Physical Society. Chubb has organized a session that will include 15 presentations from international scientists, aimed at helping to bridge the gap between this new field and mainstream science. __________________________________________________________________________________ 7. American Chemical Society Fall 2008 National Meeting & Exposition As he did last year, Jan Marwan has again organized a Symposium on New Energy Technology at the American Chemical Society national meeting. This year's "fall national meeting" takes place in Philadelphia, PA in late summer, Aug. 17 - 21, 2008. Registration and travel information is not yet available. The symposium announcement is at this Web site. __________________________________________________________________________________ 8. 14th International Conference on Condensed Matter Nuclear Science __________________________________________________________________________________ 9. New Energy Foundation Announces Cold Fusion Oral History On Feb. 15, the New Energy Foundation announced the Cold Fusion Oral History Project, which will include interviews with scientists, researchers, program and government administrators, journalists and other key figures whose work influenced the history of research in Condensed Matter Nuclear Science. The University of Utah’s J. Willard Marriott Library Special Collections will be the official repository for the collection when the project is completed. “This arrangement brings to fruition the hopes that the New Energy Foundation and I had at the beginning of the project to have the benefit of the University of Utah’s expertise and capabilities,” project director Marianne Macy said. The University of Utah plays an important role in cold fusion history, because Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons made their historic cold fusion announcement there on March 23, 1989. According to the New Energy Foundation, they will process and publish the materials, and the University of Utah will become the center of cold fusion science historical research. The New Energy Foundation initiated the project in May 2007 and provided initial funding, which will be supplemented by the University of Utah. An unnamed seven-member advisory panel, comprising researchers and advocates in the field, aided Macy in identifying all of the individuals to be included in the oral history. Interviews, which are researched and conducted by Macy, have been under way since June 2007. Macy, who according to the press release has worked in the fields of oral history and journalism since 1980, will assure that the agreements under which the interviews were conducted are fully adhered to. New Energy Foundation general manager Christy Frazier noted, "We believe it is of important historic value that the University of Utah will become the repository for this collection, and we are also excited about the fact that it will be completed around the 20th anniversary date of the cold fusion discovery. Most people in this field have been working diligently and producing great results for these past 20 years, and it is extremely important that their life's work and contribution to science be recorded for posterity." The New Energy Foundation will retain the right of first publication of released oral history materials. Selected sections of some interviews, with the subject’s permission and review, will be published in Infinite Energy magazine to coincide with both the 14th International Conference on Condensed Matter Nuclear Science (ICCF-14) in Washington, D.C., in August 2008 and the 20th anniversary of the Fleischmann-Pons announcement on March 23, 2009. The University of Utah J. Willard Marriott Library's role will include the digitizing of transcripts and creation of the appropriate technology base for keyword searching. After the New Energy Foundation’s initial publication and role in creating awareness of the archive, the Marriott Library will host the digital access through the University's online publication system. The original oral records and transcripts of the interviews will be held in the J. Willard Marriott Library's Special Collections. Gregory C. Thompson, associate director and head of special collections at the J. Willard Marriott Library, indicated that this important relationship among the New Energy Foundation, Marianne Macy and the University’s J. Willard Marriott Library will continue to develop the University’s cold fusion oral history collection and archives. For more information about the New Energy Foundation Cold Fusion Oral History Collection, please contact the New Energy Foundation at (603) 485-4700, or staff@infinite-energy.com. __________________________________________________________________________________ 10. New Energy Times Index of Commercial LENR Research Groups __________________________________________________________________________________ 11. ENECO Files for Chapter 11 Protection Salt Lake City-based ENECO, one of the oldest LENR-related firms, filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy on Jan. 18. The firm's focus is now primarily on thermal to electric conversion devices. __________________________________________________________________________________ 12. Russ George's D2Fusion Disappears; Planktos Runs Aground __________________________________________________________________________________ 13. Public Service Announcements Interfacial Electrochemist in Spain Seeks LENR Work LENR Down Under __________________________________________________________________________________ ANALYSIS AND PERSPECTIVES In January, I flew to India on a speaking tour to discuss low energy nuclear reaction (LENR) research. I suppose the seeds of this trip were sown three years ago when Nadine Winocur and I finished our book, "The Rebirth of Cold Fusion." At the time, in 2005, we sent a few copies to people we knew in the condensed matter nuclear science community. One of these people was Mahadeva (M.) Srinivasan, former associate director of the physics group at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), India. M. Srinivasan, along with Padmanabha Krishnagopala Iyengar, former director of BARC and former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission led the cold fusion research in India from 1989 to 1994 before it fell out of favor.
We air-mailed a book to M.R. Srinivasan and received a nice letter from him shortly afterward. "It was very kind of you and Nadine Winocur to send me a copy of your book "The Rebirth of Cold Fusion," M. R. Srinivasan wrote in April 2005. "I have read the book with great interest. I compliment both of you for writing a very readable book conveying the drama surrounding the subject.
M. Srinivasan also invited two researchers from the CMNS community to participate in the LENR seminar that Rajan was arranging, but by the fall of 2007, these researchers backed out. On short notice, M. Srinivasan invited Michael McKubre, director of the Energy Research Center at SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., who accepted the invitation to participate in the LENR seminar at Rajan's International Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics. In the same period, M. Srinivasan began booking more speaking engagements for McKubre and me. I also made arrangements to set up a video interview with Iyengar because he was a key pioneer in the history of cold fusion research. The progression of the trip, from one speaking engagement at Rajan's conference to the whistle-stop tour of southern India, is a mystery to me, but certainly M. Srinivasan deserves much credit for making it happen. M. Srinivasan was also able to arrange partial financial support for the trip from India's Department of Atomic Energy Board of Research in Nuclear Sciences as well as Pentagram Research Corp. The outline of our tour is listed below.
The unique aspect of our lecture tour in India was that, in contrast with 13 other nations, not a single LENR research project, to our awareness, had taken place in India since 1994. One of the attendees of our Jan. 9 workshop, C.K. Mathews, succinctly explained the problem. Mathews is a managing director for Indus Scientific Pvt Ltd. and was the director of the chemistry group at the Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research in Kalpakkam, one of the largest nuclear research centers in the country.
"In the beginning, we did some cold fusion research, and we published our results," Mathews said, "but the negative pressure on us was so overwhelming that we had to give up everything. I am glad there is a revival." A few of the people we met with had been extremely hostile toward the subject in the early days, many had been neutral and some had been open-minded and optimistic. But everywhere on our tour, we were received warmly and enthusiastically. All in all, we never faced any hostility with regard to LENR. Only one person we met, a nuclear physicist at BARC, remained openly skeptical after the lecture. In general, a nearly unanimous consensus emerged; the attitude in India regarding LENR flipped. The questions shifted from "How could it be real?" to "How should we restart our research programs?" and "How can we best serve the needs of our country?" It was a tremendous honor to meet these scientists and government representatives, only some of whom this report will mention by name. We met dozens of others at the various laboratories and universities we visited.
My conversation with Iyengar was fascinating; see the note at the end of this article for a link to the video. One of the things I distinctly remember from the conversation is his response to how to solve the seemingly unsolvable mystery of LENR. "Lateral thinking" was his response. In other words, thinking outside the box and seeking answers from new places, not merely trying to solve the problems with a new variation of the same old approach. I found a surprising amount of talent in high places in India with regard to materials science, which is highly applicable to LENR research. Sri Kumar Banerjee, the director of BARC, is, for example, a specialist in hydrogen in metals. The BARC research facility, perhaps the largest in India, employs 15,000 people, of which 4,500 are researchers. Even though Banerjee did not have direct experience with LENR, that domain was not such a foreign concept to him. During our breakfast meeting, he immediately understood one of the key problems with the field. At the International Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics, I had the chance to speak to a few hundred very bright students, mostly science and engineering college students, many of whom had traveled for several hours to attend the conference. They caught on quickly to the subject matter and were immediately asking me how and where they could start working on LENR research. I had no clear answers for them, because this conference was at the beginning of our tour. By the end of the tour, it became obvious that that national labs were likely to initiate programs. The most important meeting on our tour was at the National Institute for Advanced Studies on the campus of the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore. The title of the meeting was "One-Day Discussion Meeting on Emerging New Energy Concepts for the 21st Century—Low Energy Nuclear Reactions." The meeting took place in the J.R.D. Tata Auditorium at the National Institute for Advanced Studies on Jan. 9. The program documents, abstracts and list of registrants is available in this pdf file. The audience comprised 40 of India's top scientists and laboratory managers. Their backgrounds included nuclear physics, metallurgy, chemistry and other disciplines. The meeting was organized by B.V. Sreekantan, M. Srinivasan and Srinivasa Ranganathan. Sreekantan is a visiting professor at the National Institute of Advanced Studies and a former director of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research. Ranganathan is a visiting fellow at the National Institute of Advanced Studies and a retired distinguished professor from the department of materials engineering at the Indian Institute of Science and Technology in Bangalore.
The National Institute of Advanced Studies is the brainchild of Sri Jehangir Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata, who was a legendary industrialist in India. In a book honoring the life and work of another Indian legend, physicist and leader Raja Ramanna, Sreekantan wrote about Tata's role in the formation of the National Institute of Advanced Studies. "Tata was inspired by the Grand Ecoles in France and dreamed of setting up a similar institution in India that would serve the important purpose of imparting multidisciplinary training to the senior administrators who are the real decision makers in the government, in public and in private sectors and in industries - decisions which had direct influence on the future course of science, technology, industry and governance in the country." On the afternoon before the NIAS workshop, we had tea with Rajagopala Chidambaram, principal scientific adviser to the government of India, chairman of the Scientific Advisory Committee to the cabinet, former Atomic Energy Commission chairman and former director of BARC. McKubre, M. Srinivasan and I had the opportunity to have a brief chat with him about LENR, and I presented him with a copy of "Rebirth of Cold Fusion." In a paper he wrote in Dec. 1989, Chidambaram expressed concerned that the Fleischmann-Pons experiment did not look like fusion as he knew it and he appeared concerned. After our recent meeting, he expressed his appreciation for the new information we provided him that showed experimental evidence of low energy nuclear reactions and that explanations other than fusion are now being considered.
own field has been the opposite, the interactions of cosmic rays - but I've kept an open mind on many issues, and one of these is this idea of cold fusion, which is now called low energy nuclear reactions." Sreekantan said that he's been "stumped" three times in his career by theoretical anomalies, and he encouraged the audience not to rely so heavily on theoretical arguments. "The final court of appeals in science is experiment," Sreekantan said. "So I think we should really look at the experimental evidence that is coming forward and see what we can learn from it." In his brief introduction, M.R. Srinivasan explained that he had been witness to the most chaotic and perhaps ugly part of cold fusion history. "I was the chairman of the [Atomic Energy] Commission at time of the Fleischmann-Pons experiment reports," M.R. Srinivasan said. "I was also the chairman of the Nuclear Power Corporation. I witnessed the great excitement over the experiments, and I also witnessed the subsequent decline of interest, including the controversy of the ethics situation and the publicity that surrounded it." McKubre led off the morning group of presentations with "Cold Fusion: Past, Present and Future," a review of his understanding developed over 19 years of his involvement with LENR research. The title of my talk was "Low Energy Nuclear Reactions Research – Global Scenario," which reviewed some of the current highlights that I thought were most important and interesting.
M. Srinivasan's presentation covered some fascinating ground on modern transmutation research and showed a relationship to transmutation in the pre-Fleischmann-Pons era. M. Srinivasan presented convincing information that made the ancient work of alchemy difficult to dismiss. Kalya Jagannatha Rao, professor emeritus of the solid state and structural chemistry unit at the Materials Research Centre in the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, gave an unscheduled and highly enthusiastic presentation with his personal overview of the field. Edmund Storms, a retired radiochemist from Los Alamos National Laboratory, provided a videotaped presentation that was shown on his behalf at the end of the afternoon, after the panel discussion. The bulk of the afternoon program consisted of a panel discussion with the three speakers from the morning program along with dignitaries Sreekantan, M.R. Srinivasan, Bikash Sinha and Sarukkai Krishnamachary Rangarajan. Sinha is the director of the Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre in Kolkata. Rangarajan is a world-renowned theoretical electrochemist and is regarded with respect by his colleague Martin Fleischmann, among others. He is the retired director of the Central Electrochemical Research Institute of India in Karaikudi. The dignitaries offered their views. One statement by Rangarajan carried with it a profound message. He expressed regret that he had not gotten involved to support the research earlier. "I was in a position to do something," Rangarajan said. The sadness and remorse was clear in his short statement; a public concession, which showed courage and honesty. If Rangarajan missed his opportunity in 1989 to lend support to Fleischmann, his participation in this historic meeting did not go unnoticed. Sinha spoke about the treatment of the subject by the general science community in the past and their a priori dismissal of it. "That kind of dogma is completely unscientific," Sinha said. "Science is not religion. It should not be faith, to believe or disbelieve. I must offer my congratulations. I see that the field has come out of the cloud of dogma. Instead of the word ‘rebirth,’ I would suggest the word ‘resurrection.’ When lots of evidences come together in one place, it is highly likely that something is there." Knowing how some of his countrymen like to engage in lively debates, Sinha implored the attendees of the meeting to focus and work together to make the afternoon's discussion productive. "We must come to some conclusion and provide a recommendation to our government," Sinha said. "We cannot stay behind and argue." Panel member M.R. Srinivasan expressed his perspective. "There does appear to be a big change," M.R. Srinivasan said. "There are some signs that there is something here. Perhaps there should be some support. There is some science here that needs to be understood. We should set some people to investigate these experiments. There is much to be commended for the progress in the work. The neglect should come to an end." Our journey in southern India concluded with a visit to the Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research in Kalpakkam and the Indian Institute of Technology at Madras. As elsewhere, we were received graciously, and the interest and enthusiasm of the researchers and professors was strong. M. Srinivasan said he wouldn't be surprised if, by the end of the year, a half-dozen groups start LENR research programs in India. See Related: P.K. Iyengar with M. Srinivasan, India's Cold Fusion Pioneers M. Srinivasan and S.B. Krivit Papers to Publish in Current Science __________________________________________________________________________________ 15. Drama on Wikipedia Street
Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of Wikipedia is the fact that it offers a glimpse into the public debate on the subject. Few media outlets are paying attention to the subject, and many of the prominent individuals known to New Energy Times who are observing the field are keeping mum though a few observers such as Ron Marshall and Pierre Carbonnelle have tried their best to participate. At the Wikipedia site, the perspectives and opinions are quite expressive, as seen in the comments on the history pages and the discussion pages. They provide a rich window into the human drama and perception of science. __________________________________________________________________________________ 16. Energy Agency Review Panel Decides Against Funding Curie "Discovery" The report concluded, "The metal of Pierre Curie and Albert Laborde cannot draw its heat from its surroundings. If it could, it would be possible to create perpetual motion, an idea that is widely rejected by mainstream scientists. We therefore conclude that spending money and energy on this topic would be ill-conceived." [This article is a satire.] __________________________________________________________________________________ 17. News From the Future—Congress Makes History Washington, D.C. March 24, 2009: Congress today begins the 2009 Congressional LENR Review and Analysis of the once-disgraced field known as cold fusion. The hearing is starting the day after the 20th anniversary of the cold fusion announcement by Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons at the University of Utah. Hearings to evaluate low energy nuclear reactions research, as it is now called, will take place at the Rayburn House Office Building beginning at 10:00 a.m. The hearings will consider whether a national research program should be dedicated to LENR research to consider its potential as a new type of clean nuclear energy. "It's not every day that our country has the opportunity to evaluate a new field of science," Cindy Goldsmith, the speaker of the house, said. "We owe it to the American people to seriously consider this new field and diligently pursue appropriate research." Another historic moment occurred recently when Bob Parker, former spokesman for the American Physics Society and previous opponent of the field, said the question of cold fusion's viability must be answered. "I deeply regret my actions over the past decade and half with regard to LENR which have interfered with and delayed the progress of serious investigations into the subject," Parker said. "The scientific community owes it to society to put in the required resources and effort," Parker said, "to find out once and for all if these unexpected low energy nuclear reactions hold any promise." The review is a joint project led by Congress, with the support of the Department of Energy, several groups within the Department of Defense and the National Science Foundation. Testimony will be heard today from qualifiers who passed through the first phase of screening last month. Applicants were required to submit one-page summaries of their experience in the field to a 12-member volunteer panel selected by Congress. Congress directed the panel to give priority to researchers who had been active in the field within the last few years. A senior congressional staffer knowledgeable about the review told New Energy Times that Congress recognized that paradigm-breaking science cannot be peer-reviewed, and thus directed the panel to consider papers published in the International Condensed Matter Nuclear Science conference proceedings as well as peer-reviewed journals. Participants who passed Phase 1 were required to draft an abstract of their work, which the review committee received several weeks ago. Today, these participants will have 10 minutes to present their work orally and to respond to questions. If Congress decides to proceed with a national program, it will ask the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to coordinate a national research plan. The Corps earned widespread public recognition for its leadership last century with the Manhattan Project, which resulted in the development of the country’s first nuclear weapon. A particularly challenging difference between the Manhattan Project and the proposed LENR research project is that the former research was of a scale and character that was, by its nature, exclusive to the domain of government. In the proposed LENR research project, the scale and character of the work is open to and applicable to a broad group of private enterprises and academic and industrial institutions. As a consequence, the proposed government LENR research project is particularly vulnerable to self-interest. Rumors coming to New Energy Times indicate that lobbyists representing the nuclear industry have jumped into action. __________________________________________________________________________________ 18. The Koldamasov Cavitation Device By Steven B. Krivit
Cavitation-induced low energy nuclear reactions are not new. Roger Stringham, among others, has worked on and reported such methods since 1989. On a trip to Russia in June 2007, New Energy Times was able to learn more about the origin of the concept behind the device. The idea behind the device appears to have come from Russian researcher Alexander Ivanovitch Koldamasov, who is retired from the Volgodonsk branch of the Russian National Research Institute of Atomic Engineering, in the town of Volgodonsk. The working medium for this device was neither heavy or light water but machine oil. The researchers speculated that the hydrogen in the oil was the main source of the fuel for the device. The oil was not burned but allegedly consumed in a nuclear reaction process. The oil was circulated through the system at very high pressures and speeds and, at one point along the way, fed through several millimeter-sized orifices. Most of the observable anomalies occurred at the exit zone of these orifices, though one researcher (Vladimir Vystoskii of Kiev National Shevchenko University), working with a device at Moscow State University and later at Keldysh Research Center, reported evidence of an unusual glow emanating from the entry point of the orifices directed upstream, into the oncoming flow of oil.
The cavitation device was brought to Edmonton, Canada, by Hyunik Yang, a Korean engineer who collaborated with the Russian researchers. Yang then partnered with Patrick Cochrane through Innovative Energy Solutions Inc. in an attempt to develop a Koldamasov-type device into a commercial product. The company ended up in bankruptcy, but several researchers continue independently to experiment with this method. New Energy Times had called this a "hydraulic-electrostatic" device. "Cavitation" now seems to be a more suitable term. We also had called it the Koldamasov-Yang device. The intellectual primacy for the device now appears more accurately attributed to Koldamasov alone. An abstract of a 1998 paper by Koldamasov, translated by Sergey A. Tsvetkov provides a concise technical description: "D2O electrolytic solution was contained in a glass tube with 1 mm diameter and 20-30 cm length. In the middle of the tube, there was a dielectric plate with a pinhole at the center. When supersonic wave with frequency 1-5 kHz was excited in the solution, neutron, gamma, 4He and heat were generated at the pinhole region with high reproducibility. The amount of excess heat reached 2000% of the input power. Energy and number of generated neutrons were 3 MeV and 40 /s cm2. Energy of gamma was 0.3 MeV." (A. Koldamasov, "Nuclear Fusion in Electric Charge," Proceedings of the 6th Russian Conference, 1998, Sochi, Russia, pp. 125-137) Koldamasov attended the 13th International Conference on Condensed Matter Nuclear Science in Sochi, Russia, in the summer of 2007. The abstract, in English, for his presentation is included in the book of abstracts for the conference. New Energy Times also has made available his paper and the audio recording of his Sochi presentation. Interview of Alexander Ivanovitch Koldamasov, June 27, 2007 Steven Krivit: Can you tell me about the beginning of this line of research? Alexander Koldamasov: I started to work with the phenomena in 1964 when I began my activity jointly with very famous Russian aerospace designer Nikolai Dmitriyevich Kuznetsov. He was an academician with the ex-USSR town of Kuibyshev; the present name is Samara. It was a special design bureau for rockets. He worked there with Sergei Pavlovich Korolev, a famous rocket designer. I was involved in the research with the first stage of the rockets. We were able to discover some specific things, some parameters that did not depend on pressure. We decided to look into the anomalies further. When we investigated this process, we made this cell. SK: When was that? AK: In 1964. When we began to do this activity, we discovered this special illumination which took place inside the cell. Immediately on discovering this phenomenon, we reported it to Korelov, and we got permission to continue this research. The task was established for us to make the fuel by itself, without additional efforts. SK: I don't understand. AK: Our given task was that the fuel should be burning by itself without adding any additional effort, without putting it in fire, without ignition. The idea was to just apply fuel and the rocket should start. And after some period of time, we got some results. At that time in Russia, all patents and licenses for making discoveries were canceled. The procedure for obtaining patents or licenses to formalize discoveries was canceled during that period. That's why applications for getting authorization and certificates is named method for the presentation of liquid compunction, how to stabilize liquid compunction. Then we made the big calculation and got results and the method of using ignition from a spark. The concept of a small portable energy source was of interest to us. We had taken into consideration of building spaceships to save each gram of metal to make their construction lighter weight. That's why this method was thought to be very practical. SK: Can you translate this certificate? [Krivit points to document listing Koldamasov's certificates.] [Interpreter: "Methods how to stabilize liquid compunction."] AK: In the ex-Soviet system, we couldn't get patents. We got certificates, instead. I have four certificates. The first one was issued during the ex-Soviet Union time. The others are more recent. They are patents for a nuclear reactor. This is another patent. In order to receive electrical current, we put a magnet outside the cell. SK: Did you ever perform energy balance measurements? AK: In comparing the input with the output, the difference was 20x; 1 kW in, 20 kW out. If we put an inductive magnet, we did not get continuous power. If we used a permanent magnet, we did get continuous power. Then we got a patent for a method for a hydrogen-creating device. In this work, Mrs. Kornilova takes part. SK: And Hyunik Yang? He takes part, as well? AK: Only Mrs. Kornilova. We applied for three more applications for methods and devices, but it is not yet time to disclose that information. When we get the patent, we can discuss that openly. SK: Can you tell me more of the details of how you first observed the phenomena? AK: We prepared a transparency material, a special sheet, and it began to glow. SK: Is there any other phenomenon you know that produces this kind of glow? AK: Yes, the glow is there, but cold fusion is not there yet; just glow. SK: I don't understand. AK: We began to observe glow, but at this stage we didn't have the cold fusion process. We had to increase the pressure to higher than 100 atm. [Krivit shows him slides from Vysotskii's ICCF-12 presentation] AK: Yes, we have this discharge. A special electromagnetic wave is created in drops. Some cloud consisting of drops has been created. SK: Are you describing cavitation? AK: Yes, that's correct. SK: What are your thoughts with regard to a practical application or device? AK: It can have practical application from this moment, we think. We made some experiments using kerosene, machine oil and both heavy and light water. SK: Who do you work with now? AK: Vladimir Vystoskii and Kornilova at Moscow State University. I'm 74 and am actually retired. I don't work anymore. AK: If I perform the experiment with kerosene or oil, it generates gamma radiation. If I work with light and heavy water, there is no gamma. SK: How does the heat compare? AK: [Unclear response] SK: How about neutrons? AK: It's possible to put protection for neutrons with the heavy and light water experiments. But it's much harder to make the protection for gamma. SK: So you are retired. Now who is continuing the work? AK: Kornilova at MSU and Baranov at the [redacted]. And installations were sold to South Korea and to Canada. SK: Were they installations or just designs? AK: We designed and created the installations. SK: Who did the design? Yang? AK: Kornilova. SK: She and Vystoskii designed them? AK: Actually, they took information from Baranov, and Baranov [took] the information from me, so this process is going on. SK: What about the Canadians? AK: The Canadians, same situation. SK: Which situation? AK: The same people stole the information. They sold it. SK: They sold it or stole it? AK: They stole information and sold the installation! SK: What was sold, and what was stolen? AK: These schemes are more or less known. SK: Is this public knowledge? AK: Yes. I don't have any claims for that because it is published. I am the owner of the patent. SK: So what part was stolen? AK: The schemes and metals. SK: Does that mean designs? AK: Yes, designs. SK: Are you a collaborator with Baranov? AK: We know each other. Are you from the U.S.? SK: Yes. AK: Well, you can do the same now, if you like. SK: Steal your designs? AK: Yes. One British man approached me, and they also wanted to take the idea and create an installation for themselves. Nothing is given to me; nobody gives me the credit. SK: Yang says this is the Koldamasov-Yang method ... AK: Yang actually bought the installation from Mrs. Kornilova. SK: What did you get? AK: I got nothing. I grew up in the Soviet Union time period, and scientists were not taught how to make money. SK: I have seen a patent that has your name as inventor but not as owner. What is that about? AK: I had a joint patent with Mrs. Kornilova for producing hydrogen. SK: Did anybody give you ... AK: The term of validity of patents will expire soon, which means anybody can begin to use them without even asking. SK: The Russian patents? AK: Yes. SK: Would you like people to use this technology? AK: Of course, being an author of this method, certainly. Baranov Replication
Dmitri Baranov may have been the first person to replicate the Koldamasov cavitation device. New Energy Times interviewed Baranov on June 27, 2007, in Sochi, Russia. He was reluctant to talk; he did not want to go on record as a representative of his institution. "My work is underground,” he said. “It's not official; it's just my hobby." He said he first met Koldamasov around 1994 or 1995. Baranov stated that his director sent him to Volgodonsk to get information about Koldamasov's work so Baranov could replicate it. Baranov was difficult to understand, but apparently he improved on the Koldamasov device by introducing transformer or machine oil to the system, replacing the light or heavy water that Koldamasov had used. An immense effort is required to purify water to exhibit the required dielectric characteristic. Baranov said oil had several advantages: a stronger dielectric property, higher viscosity and a much simpler high-pressure pump than is required for a water system. Lineage of Koldamasov Machine Alla Kornilova (Moscow State University) said that she and Vladimir Vystoskii (Kiev National Shevchenko University) first met Yang in 2001 on an unrelated matter having to do with hyaluronic acid (used in biotechnology). According to abstracts, in 2002, researchers S.M. Godin, L.B. Polyakov and V.V. Roschin reported “Electric, Magnetic & Radiation Effects Research in Modificated Koldamasov Cell” at the 10th Russian Conference on Cold Nuclear Transmutations of Chemical Elements and Ball-Lightning. Kornilova stated that, in 2002, Yang sponsored the trips for herself, Koldamasov and Vysotskii to attend the 9th International Conference on Cold Fusion in Beijing, China, and they collaborated there. At some point Yang made an agreement with Patrick Cochrane of Innovative Energy Solutions Inc., apparently representing the Russian researchers. On Dec. 1, 2005, Yang informed New Energy Times that he was no longer working with Innovative Energy Solutions Inc.; instead, he was working with Fusion Research Corp. In 2007, Kornilova stated that she and Vysotskii were no longer business partners with Yang.
__________________________________________________________________________________ 19. Excerpts of Student Paper: Report on the Work of A.I. Koldamasov [The following text is a translation of some of the text from this student paper pertaining to the cavitation work of Alexander Ivanovici Koldamasov. The paper was written in 2005 as an entry in the all-Russia competition "Energy of the Future," sponsored by the Federal Agency on Atomic Energy, Nuclear Society of Russia, Volgodonsk Branch. The full paper, in Russian, with photos and diagrams is here.] In the year 1972, A.I. Koldamasov, an engineer from the town Kuibyshev (today called Samara, Russia) has published a paper [43] (it is about "ball lightning in liquids") in which he related about the observation of a bright discharge formed when distilled water (with a high specific resistance - greater that 10E11 ohm-m) is forced to flow through cylindrical holes of 2 mm diameter and length of 25-30 mm, made in a plate of organic glass (poly-methylmethacrylate) or other dielectric material, positioned coaxially in a tube to which it is fed water with a gear pump, up to a pressure of 7MPa. The glow discharge appeared when at the input edge of the hole made in the dielectric material started an intense hydrodynamic cavitation that has triggered strong resonating pulsations of the water column in the tube between the gear pump and the dielectric plate, with a frequency of 5kHz. Pulsations were induced to the water column by the pump in that each pair of gears, closing down, created a shock. The experimenter had to choose the speed of rotations of the gears for which the frequency of the shocks became equal to the specific pulsation of water in the column. The glow came from a ring of plasma formation at the input edge of the hole. The color of the glow depends on the material of the dielectric plate: for ebonite: yellow, for organic glass: orange, for asbo-cement: green. Pyrometric measurements have shown that the temperature of the plasma attains 10E4 K, and the energy contained is 10E4 J/cm E3. It could be stated that the glow is associated with Rontgen radiation that is dangerous for life. The intensity of the dose at a distance of 10-15 cm was up to 0.85 mR/s and the energy of the quanta 0.3 MeV. After 100 hours of functioning, during that the observed glow was more or less intense, the surface of the organic glass at the input edge of the limiting hole changed color, however no sign of erosion could be observed. In case if Koldamasov could then guess that he has to measure also the level of neutron radiation coming from this "ball lightning in water" as he then called this formation of plasma, then he could possibly receive the laurels of Fleischmann and Pons. However he has performed such measurements, described in [44] only in 1989 after the publication regarding the discovery of cold fusion. The density the flux of neutrons for the Koldamasov experiment with the addition of 1% heavy water, at a distance of 10-15 cm from the source is up to 35 sqcm/s. In the Koldamasov experiments a stabile flux of neutrons is obtained with a global intensity reported to the complete sphere of 10E3/second. Other people even do not dare to dream about such high results. The author has published results only for the local flux not the global value. During the initial period of his research Koldamasov has supposed that the observed glow is due to sonoluminescence, but later it became obvious that sono luminescence was observed only inside the liquid cavitating in the throttling channel and has a completely different behavior than the glowing plasma cloud. He has observed sonoluminescence even then when the negative potential accumulated on the metallic isolated pipe leading to the throttling plate was not linked to the earth via the microampermeter and when the glow of the plasma formation was extinguished and the Roentgen and neutron radiation has also disappeared. This means that in this case sonoluminescence is not linked to cold fusion if this takes place during these experiments. The merit of Koldamasov is also bound to that he was able to show that not the metallic details exposed to cavitation in water are causing cold fusion, but something else. At the X-th International Symposium: "Revision of Natural Sciences" (Volgodonsk, Russia, April 1999) [45] the inventor has presented his hypothesis regarding the nuclear processes that take place in his device during the experiments described above. He came to the conclusion that the deuterons in all the processes of cold fusion are not overcoming the Coulomb barrier but are coming near one to other due to electro-neutrality. A.I. Koldamasov starts from the known theory of the exchange interactions between the nucleons in the deuteron, realized via the virtual negatively charged mesons. When such a meson generating a neutron after some time in the nucleus of the atom is transformed in a proton, is flying to an other (real) proton in the deuteron, where the distance between the nucleons is significant (because the radius deuteron is 6 times greater than the radius of the nucleon) then for some time it is placed between two positively charged protons. And as the positively charged foils of the electroscope are not more repelling each other when between them it is a negatively charged foil and start to be attracted by it, in the same way the negative charge of the meson in the deuteron is neutralizing the interaction of the positively charged protons in the deuteron. Further the neutral deuteron can interact nuclearly with the nuclei of any atoms from the periodic system of Mendeleev. For this reason, in his opinion, the atomic mass of each element of the periodic system, usually differs from the mass of its neighbor by the mass of two nucleons. In order that the deuterons should come near to each other and enter the reaction of cold fusion it is necessary first to ionize the atoms of deuterium and then accelerate the positive ions (deuterons) to a sufficiently high speed. All these are accomplished, according to the inventor, in the electric field of high tension formed due to the charging of the surface of the dielectric plate with positive charges. He thinks that the atoms of deuterium from water under the influence of the positive charge of the edge of the hole are losing their electrons. Thus formed positive ions of deuterium in the same field of the edge are accelerated in water and get the kinetic energy necessary for the bombardment of other nuclei of deuterium and entering nuclear interaction without overcoming the Coulomb barrier. Conclusions __________________________________________________________________________________ 20. Proton-21 Research Presented in University of Illinois Seminar On Feb. 26, Dr. Lev B. Malinovskyi presented a seminar on “Controlled Nucleosynthesis” at the University of Illinois, based on research at the Electrodynamics Laboratory Proton-21, headed by Dr. Stanislav Adamenko, Kiev, Ukraine. The laboratory began in 1998. Since 2000, they have been conducting studies of nuclear reactions stimulated by injection of a focused high-voltage electron beam into the hemispherical tip of a thin target rod. The Proton-21 group is studying ways to use the technology for power generation, for materials modification, and for remediation of radioactive wastes. The following data are from the seminar and from the article cited in Reference 1. Early targets were 0.5 mm diameter high-purity Cu, Ag, Ta, or Pb. The electron beam had up to 500 keV energy, 50 kA current, lasting 30 ns, with beam energy up to 2.5 kJ. The researchers observed that the tip peeled away like the peels of a banana and left a conical crater in the rod. (See Figure 1 below).
They studied optical emissions, particle emissions, x-rays, and transmutations of target elements. They have done 15,000 experiments. The optical measurements with a resolution < 1 nm were fit with a computer program to identify elements and intensities. The data indicated about 8x1017 ions with energies ~ 9.5 keV (from Doppler broadening), total energy 0.75 kJ, and 1018 electrons with Te ~ 0.36 keV, energy 60 J. They also found spectral lines of elements not in the original target. Fast ions were measured with CR-39 track detectors and with time-of-flight magnetic analyzers. The magnetic analyzers measured plasma ions with energies ~ 20 keV/nucleon. The track detectors found evidence for clusters of alpha particles with energies of 4-6 MeV. With 300 J input, the yield of exploded material energy is up to 10 MJ. About 1015 x-ray photons with a peak energy ~ 35 keV are emitted from the source region (diameter < 200 mm) in 10 ns. The x-ray and gamma ray spectra from the target are similar to those from quasars, gamma-bursts, and pulsars (See Figure 12 below) but not with those from supernova CH1987A or the sun.
They studied the reaction products with several methods. X-ray electron probe microanalysis in various locations after compression of an initially pure (99.99%) Cu target revealed synthesis of elements Zn, K, Mg, and Au in significant quantities. (See Figure 20 below.)
Gold (197.0 amu) is much heavier than copper (63.5 amu). From analysis of a screen that collects emitted atoms, they estimate that about 1015-1016 atoms were synthesized per shot with a 300 Joule electron beam incident onto the targets. The synthesized atoms are stable, emitting very little radiation. Mass spectrometric measurements of the material deposited on the screen showed anomalous isotope ratios for several elements. For example, the ratio of 57Fe/56Fe was increased from the normal value of 2.4% up to 12% at the surface of one sample, decreasing to the normal value at a depth of 15 mm. Isotope ratio shifts were also shown in Si, Ca, Ni, Cu, Hf, Zr, and Zn. In other experiments, radioactive 60Co was compressed, and the resulting radioactivity was reduced by 2% to 48% in various samples. From experimental data, they calculate that about 2.5x1018 radioactive nuclei in the focal zone are transmuted per 300 Joule of beam energy incident. In experiments with heavy targets (Pt, Pb, Bi), they found evidence for formation of superheavy elements with masses over 400 amu. They conclude that impact-induced compression could initiate collective, multiparticle nuclear reactions in the target material, as evidenced by the formation of elements more than twice the mass of the target element. The dense sea of electrons reduces the Coulomb barrier between positive ions, facilitating their close approach and nuclear interactions. Malinovskyi said that Proton-21 scientists presented these results at a seminar in Bonn, Germany, in 2004; and he stated that, since then, they have had collaborations with many European laboratories, which rechecked their experiments, measured the reaction products and verified their results. Proton-21 is studying ways to use their nucleosynthesis technology for power generation, for materials modification, and for remediation of radioactive wastes. They have applied for or received patents in Europe, the USA, Japan, and elsewhere. Their new accelerator can provide 80 |