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COLD FUSION RETURNS TO MIT
Posted on Tuesday, April 19, 2005 @ 22:19:57 UTC by vlad

Science FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (APRIL 20, 2005)

COLD FUSION GOES BACK TO SCHOOL AT
THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

CAMBRIDGE, MASS, April 20, 2005 -- The Massachusetts Institute of Technology will be the site of a daylong colloquium May 21, on the topics of cold fusion and other clean energy research.

"The clean energy colloquium is a timely opportunity for the active but underfunded cold fusion community in the United States to discuss recent progress, perspectives and possible actions," research professor David J. Nagel of The George Washington University said.

The debate on this controversial topic was rekindled by the 2004 Department of Energy cold fusion review (See "News" menu at the NewEnergyTimes.com Web site.) The reviewers remained undecided about cold fusion but encouraged further study in this mysterious new scientific field.

"A healthy skepticism is warranted," says Steven B. Krivit, author of a recent book on cold fusion. "However, the facts show that cold fusion experiments have been demonstrated, reproduced, replicated and published in peer-review journals."

Experimental evidence consistently demonstrates that nuclear-scale energy, in the form of heat, is being generated without harmful radiation, greenhouse gasses or nuclear waste.

With the uncertain future of oil and natural gas supplies, and the undeniable rising cost of oil, the prospect of clean nuclear energy comes at an ideal time.

One of the presenters, Dr. Mitchell Swartz of JET Thermal Products, has developed a working experimental cold fusion reactor. Swartz demonstrated the device at MIT in August 2003 during the 10th International Conference on Cold Fusion.

Program and registration information for the colloquium is available under the "Conferences" menu at the NewEnergyTimes.com Web site.


CONTACT:
Melissa Brown
New Energy Times
(310) 470-8189

Source: NewEnergyTimes




 
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"COLD FUSION RETURNS TO MIT" | Login/Create an Account | 3 comments | Search Discussion
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Re: COLD FUSION RETURNS TO MIT (Score: 1)
by Rock_nj on Wednesday, April 20, 2005 @ 07:08:20 UTC
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I will probably attend this event on May 21st at MIT. The big question I will have is why has there been no substanial progress in proving cold fusion to the wider science community since the last meeting at MIT 21 months prior in Aug, 2003?

It seems to me that it's time for cold fusion researchers to come together and produce a 100% reproducible cold fusion experiment to finally put the controversy to a rest. Unlike years past, when cold fusion was utterly ignored and ridiculed by mainstream science, now the mainstream is starting to take it a bit more seriously. At least seriously enough that if a 100% reproducible cold fusion experiment was put forward, they couldn't just ignore it. They would have to evaluate it and acknowledge it.

It's time for Cold Fuioneers to step up to the plate.



 

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