"We're talking about a new field  of science that's a hybrid between chemistry and physics."
 Really? Researchers at a US Navy laboratory have  unveiled what they say is "significant" evidence of cold fusion, a potential  energy source that has many skeptics in the scientific community.
 The scientists described what they called the first  clear visual evidence that low-energy nuclear reaction, or cold fusion devices  can produce neutrons, subatomic particles that scientists say are indicative of  nuclear reactions.
 "Our finding is very  significant," said analytical chemist Pamela Mosier-Boss of the US Navy's Space  and Naval Warfare Systems Center.
 Really? The city is also the site of an  infamous presentation on cold fusion 20  years ago by Martin Fleishmann and Stanley Pons that sent  shockwaves across the world. Despite their claim to cold fusion discovery, the  Fleishmann-Pons study soon fell into discredit after other researchers were  unable to reproduce the results.
 Paul Padley, a physicist at Rice  University who reviewed Mosier-Boss's published work, said the study did not  provide a plausible explanation of how cold fusion could take place in the  conditions described.
 "It fails to provide a theoretical  rationale to explain how fusion could occur at room temperatures. And in its  analysis, the research paper fails to exclude other sources for the production  of neutrons," he told the Houston Chronicle.
 But Steven Krivit, editor of the  New Energy Times,  said the study was "big" and could open a new scientific  field.
 The neutrons produced in the  experiments "may not be caused by fusion but perhaps some new, unknown nuclear  process," added Krivit, who has monitored cold fusion studies for the past 20  years.
 Meanwhile, in the United  States, no federal or state money is being spent on cold fusion and as recently  as last November The Washington Post ran a review by the director of the  American Physical Society that attacked the cold fusionists with less than  scientific reserve:  
 "If everyone knows it is wrong, why are  they doing it? Inept scientists whose reputations would be tarnished, greedy  administrators.... gullible politicians who had squandered the taxpayers'  dollars, lazy journalists... - all had an interest in making it appear that the  issue had not been settled. Their easy corruption was one of the most chilling  aspects of this sad comedy. To be sure, there are true believers among the  cold-fusion acolytes, just as there are sincere scientists who believe in  psychokinesis, flying saucers, creationism and the Chicago Cubs. A Phd in  sciences is not inoculation against foolishness. - or  mendacity."
 When Jed Rothwell, who heads Cold  Fusion Research Advocates, asked the editor of Scientific American why his  journal had not covered the cold fusion story, he described it as "pathological  science" with no merit whatsoever.
 YIKES - Progress in Scientific  American?
