From Deseret News archives:
DOE to review a new batch of claims in cold-fusion quest
'I think it's high time, actually,' BYU's Jones says
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Jones, a professor of physics and astronomy, never claimed impressive energy outputs in his own studies. He has been looking into unusual findings. He was the lead speaker at the conference last August in Cambridge, Mass., where new findings were announced.
He said he wants to make a clear distinction, and always has, "between the nuclear work which we pioneered" and the claims of excess heat production. "I think those are the two camps, and those camps persist to this day, actually," he said. "I'm a bit disappointed that the physics community has by and large overlooked this work and denigrated it," Jones said. But some physicists expressed interest in the field, he added.
Eugene Mallove, editor of New Energy magazine and a supporter of fusion research since 1989, is excited about the DOE review.
"It turns out that the phenomena we're talking about are far broader than the original discovery," he said in a telephone interview.
What Pons and Fleischmann came upon should not be called fusion, he thinks. Instead, it is "a new form of energy" with mysterious nuclear aspects.
Mallove hopes the DOE review will turn policy toward funding the new areas of research and away from the multibillion-dollar chase after hot fusion. The country and the world have paid dearly because the 1989 discovery was not properly followed up, he believes.
"There should never have been a war against cold fusion, but there was one," he said. "And it's coming to an end, a screeching halt."
Among the discoveries Mallove cites are Japanese experiments that seemingly border on alchemy. Elements are changing into other elements in these experiments, he said, and the research has been published in a prestigious Japanese peer-reviewed physics journal.
John Huizenga, a retired professor of chemistry at the University of Rochester, N.Y. and co-chairman of the DOE 20-member panel that reviewed cold-fusion claims in 1989 is against having a review.
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