"ALL CAPS IN DEFENSE OF LIBERTY IS NO VICE."

Friday, September 21, 2007

What climate change and fusion tell us about orthodoxies versus dissent in sceince and religion

Over at Climate Audit they are discussing “Miscalculation, poor study design or self-serving data analysis”.

Let me relate this to my current field of study - Nuclear Fusion.

The big money is going into projects like ITER (the US is spending something like $200 to $400 mil a year on this project). All the scientists involved say we are at least 30 years away from a net power reactor delivering watts to the grid. When that net power device is built it will be too big 17GW (most power plants built today are under 100MW and the largest are in the 1 GW range), too expensive (at 20X to 30X the current cost of electricity), and too late. All this is inherent in trying to get fusion by heating things up. And yet funding rolls on. Grant money is relatively easy if there is an ITER angle.

Contrast this with IEC fusion. In the US there are 5 to 10 projects going on at a funding rate that is probably on the order of $20 million or less total. The thing about IEC Fusion is that instead of heating up a mass of gas to get fusion in the high energy tail, particles are accelerated directly to fusion speeds. This makes the devices much smaller, less costly, and quicker to develop. So who is doing IEC Fusion? Basically a bunch of old cranks who see ITER and the Tokamaks as useless except as science fair projects. Let me quote Plasma Physicist Dr. Nicholas Krall who said, "We spent $15 billion dollars studying tokamaks and what we learned about them is that they are no damn good."

And yet the money rolls on.

If I was in charge of science I would see that in any discipline 70% went to mainstream and 30% to dissenters. That would tend to keep everyone honest. Does it mean some money would go for stupidity? Sure. As Murray Gell-Mann says - there is a reason most new stuff ought not get funded, most of it is flat wrong. However, if we do not encourage dissent from orthodoxy we will never learn anything new.

Our current ratios are out of balance.

Let me add that a significant part of the 30% should go towards replication by dissenters.

If we are really going to do good science we must encourage a climate of dissent and replication.

Let me add that we see this in Cold Fusion. The mainstream derided it because at first replication was difficult. Now at least the laboratory aspects are better under control and replication is the norm. We still do not understand what is happening or why. However, finally progress is being made. So far it seems to be a low energy process. Heat is created. Just not enough to even boil the water (actually D2O) in the experimental apparatus. It is being researched. We will find out why. We lost 10 years of useful work because of clinging to orthodoxy.

In many ways the institutional science world is like the institutional religious world: Woe be unto him who strays from the canon.

Interestingly enough the US Navy is funding IEC Fusion and Cold Fusion. Why? They don't look at it from a right/wrong basis. It is all about risk vs reward. They are not crazy. They do require at least a minimum of results before funding. They come at it from: "we don't know everything" and "mathematics can be helpful but is not definitive. Only real world results count".

Why not more dependence on math? Because with math - if you pick the right assumptions - you can prove anything.

Cross Posted at Power and Control and at Classical Values

4 comments:

Jed Rothwell said...

I appreciate your comments about cold fusion. Our website has a bibliography of 3,000 papers on this subject, include hundreds of peer-reviewed ones, and ~500 full text papers. See:

http://lenr-canr.org

As you say, progress has been slow, but significant. Repeatability has improved to about 30% for the conventional bulk-Pd techniques. Others methods work better. I think ion-beam loading works every time.

Iwamura et al. (Mitsubishi) have run several experiments per year for the last 8 years or so, with 100% success. The experiment is elaborate and take months to perform, and the equipment costs ~$20 million, so they can only be done a few times per year. The experiment is now being done at the National Sychrotron lab and Toyota as well.

It may interest you to learn that many cold fusion experiments are considered "lukewarm" in that they use sparking or steady glow discharge, which is hotter than room temperature but much colder than a Tokamak. See Claytor (Los Alamos) and Rout (BARC) who produced this beautiful autoradiograph:

http://lenr-canr.org/Experiments.htm#AutoradiographsMSrinivasan

Regarding your field, here is a recent development reportedly "improves efficiencies of conventional nuclear fusion schemes, such as magnetic fusion, laser fusion and heavy ion fusion, particularly, heavy ion fusion." See:

http://www.baeinstitute.com/tech_advPropulsion.html

- Jed Rothwell
Librarian, LENR-CANR.org

DiscerningTexan said...

Our system for allocating research funds is incredibly corrupt. I don't know a lot about fusion, but what you report here makes a lot of sense to me, considering how many billions of dollars of reasearch money are being wasted.

I think Michael Crichton addresses this subject very well in his Caltech speech "Aliens Cause Global Warming" and other speeches and writings he's made. Bjorn Lomborg is another person who has made it his mission to point out the difference between legitimate skepticism and big money Political Correctness passing itself as "Science".

Reliapundit said...

if we got the feds out of the financing biz then this wouldn't happen: nobody looking to make a buck would waste R&D money on PC crap.

Unknown said...

I like the last part, if we focus on the math and get the assumptions right, we can prove anything. A recent book on the topic, Quantum Ring Theory: Foundations for Cold Fusion does just that. The author puts forth a new mathematical theory concerning the neutron that he argues is essential for finally figuring out cold fusion. I'm not a math guy, so I can't verify it, but some experiments seem to support parts of the theory. Maybe math is the answer.