CFRL English News No. 73
(2009. 10. 20)
Cold
Fusion Research Laboratory (
E-mail address; hjrfq930@ybb.ne.jp, cf-lab.kozima@pdx.edu
Websites; http://www.geocities.jp/hjrfq930/, http://web.pdx.edu/~pdx00210/
(Back numbers of this News are posted on the above geocities and/or PSU site of the CFRL Websites)
CFP (Cold Fusion Phenomenon) stands for gnuclear reactions and accompanying events occurring
in solids with high densities of hydrogen isotopes (H and/or D) in ambient
radiationh belonging to Solid-State Nuclear Physics (SSNP) or Condensed Matter
Nuclear Science (CMNS).
This is the CFRL News (in English) No. 73 for Cold Fusion researchers
published by Dr. H. Kozima, now at the Cold Fusion Research Laboratory,
This
issue contains following items:
1. Cold Fusion Session in APS March Meeting
was held on March 16 in
2. ACS National Spring Meeting in Salt Lake CityiMarch 22 – 26, 2009j was held
3. JCF9 was held on March 28 and 29, 2009 in
4. Proceedings
of JCF9 was published
5. Three papers from Cold Fusion
Research Laboratory (CFRL) was presented at JCF9
6. ICCF15iOctober 5 – 9, Rome, Italyj was held.
1.
2009
APS March Meeting‚ÌCold Fusion SessioniMarch 16 – 20, 2009, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvaniaj@was held on March 16.
The
nominal name of the session is written in the Program as follows:
2009
APS March Meeting, Monday–Friday,
March 16–20, 2009;
Ten papers was presented. The program of
the Session is posted at the following page of the CFRL News (October 25,
2009):
http://www.geocities.jp/hjrfq930/News/
2. Papers on the Cold Fusion Phenomenon were presented
at ACS National Spring Meeting in Salt Lake City iMarch
22 – 26, 2009j
Jan Marwan, chemist, organized the New Energy Technology Session of the Division of Environmental Chemistry at ACS National Spring Meeting in Salt Lake City (March 22 – 26, 2009). About 40 papers were presented at the Session from March 22 – 24.
On the 20th anniversary of the
memorial Fleischmann-Pons-Hawkins paper, there were veterans in this field who
have contributed splendid works which formed the fundamental structure of the
cold fusion science.
The program of the Session is posted at the following page of CFRL News No. 73 (October 25, 2009):
http://www.geocities.jp/hjrfq930/News/@
Abstracts
of Scientific Papers were contained in the CD distributed at the Conference at
a charge of $100 and also posted at the following site of the New Energy Times
website:
http://www.newenergytimes.com/v2/conferences/2009/ACS/ACS-2009-Schedule-Abstracts.shtml@
3. JCF9 was held on March 28 – 29, 2009 in Shizuoka,
Japan
The
9th Annual Meeting of Japan CF-Research Society (JCF9) was held in
4. Proceedings of JCF9 was
published
Proceedings of
the Ninth Meeting of Japan CF Research Society, JCF was published on September. The Preface and the Contents of the Proceedings
were posted at the pages of CFRL News No. 73 (October 25, 2009):
http://www.geocities.jp/hjrfq930/News/
The Program of the
Proceedings and the Abstracts of the papers contained in it are posted at the
JCF website:
http://dragon.elc.iwate-u.ac.jp/jcf/JCF9/
5. Three papers from the CFRL (Cold Fusion
Research Laboratory) were presented at JCF9
At
the Conferences mentioned above (APS2009CACS2009, JCF9), several papers from the CFRL
were presented. These papers were published as full papers in Reports of CFRL
(the Cold Fusion Research Laboratory) and posted at CFRL website:
http://www.geocities.jp/hjrfq930/Papers/paperr/paperr.html
@The
titles of the three papers presented at JCF9 were cited below;
(1) H.
Kozima, gNon-localized Proton/Deuteron Wavefunctions and Neutron Bands in
Transition-metal Hydrides/Deuteridesh Proc.
JCF9, pp. 84 – 93 (2009)
(2) H. Kozima and T. Mizuno, gInvestigation of the Cold Fusion
Phenomenon in the Surface Region of Hydrogen Non-occlusive Metal Catalysts; W,
Pt, and Aug Proc. JCF9, pp.
52 – 58 (2009)
(3) T. Mizuno and H. Kozima, gHeat Generation by
Hydrogenation of Carbon Hydrideh Proc. JCF9, pp.
41 – 45 (2009)
6. ICCF15 iOctober 5 – 9, Rome, Italyj
was held in Rome
ICCF15 (The 15th
International Conference on Condensed Matter Nuclear Science) was held in
http://www.newenergytimes.com/v2/conferences/2009/ICCF15/ICCF15.shtml
Looking into the List of Abstracts,
there are 71 Oral Presentations and 41 Poster Presentations. Oral Presentations
include 10 papers on Fleischmann & Pons Experiments, 21 on Theories and 40 on
Experiments.
As I have pointed out in my
papers (especially in Reports of CFRL 8-5, posted at the
following website), the Fleischmannfs hypothesis stays in the center of the
research and an overall view of the cold fusion phenomenon is obscured:
http://www.geocities.jp/hjrfq930/Papers/paperr/paperr.html.