Greetings !
Originally posted by russ_watters
Since energy = temperature, you can't give a
particle energy without heating it.
No offense, but "heating a particle" is not
a sensible statement russ. Heat is the average
energy of a large amount of particles in
close proximity to each other.
There are 3 ways of containing a sustained
fusion reaction:
1. Gravitational confinement (like the Sun).
2. EM confinement (tokamaks and most other
current attempts).
2. Enertial confinement (particle beams,
current attempts include fusion using ultrasound).
Cold fusion is NOT dealing with a sustained
reaction, though it may and must indeed - in order
to really be useful to us(beyond basic
research

), be self-sustaining in terms of
energy for the whole system.
Now, think of a room of plastic explosives
stacked up together and some hydrogen/deutirium/
tritium in the middle. We blow it all up - we
use the potential chemical energy of the explosives
in an appropriate chemical reaction. Possibly, some
of the explosion's energy will force some
particles to fuse (this is an EXAMPLE, I have NO
idea what will really happen - except a small
earthquake of course ). Also, think of our
current sources of energy - we use the potential
chemical energy of essentialy - dead plants to get
some free energy for our use. So, cold fusion is
partially similar - we put some fusable element/s
in an appropriate material and trigger the
appropriate chemical reaction that will have
a strong enough effect to fuse the above element/s.
There is nothing theoreticly impossible about it,
as far as I can see.
Live long and prosper.