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Main Authors: Messinger, Jonah F, Metzler, Florian, Price, Huw
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.09996
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author Messinger, Jonah F
Metzler, Florian
Price, Huw
author_facet Messinger, Jonah F
Metzler, Florian
Price, Huw
contents One of the most public episodes of gatekeeping in modern science was the case of so-called 'cold fusion'. At a news conference in 1989 the electrochemists Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons announced that they had found evidence of nuclear fusion in palladium electrodes loaded with deuterium. There was worldwide interest. Many groups sought to reproduce the results, most unsuccessfully. Within months, the prevailing view became strongly negative. The claims of Fleischmann and Pons came to be regarded as disreputable, as well as false. As the Caltech physicist David Goldstein put it, cold fusion became 'a pariah field, cast out by the scientific establishment' (Goldstein 1994). The case would already be interesting for students of gatekeeping if the story had ended at that point. Even more interestingly, however, the field survived and persisted. It has been enjoying a modest renaissance, with recent government funding both in the US and the EU. This piece offers an opinionated introduction to cold fusion as a case study of scientific gatekeeping, discussing both its early and recent history
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_09996
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Gatekeeping: a Partial History of Cold Fusion
Messinger, Jonah F
Metzler, Florian
Price, Huw
History and Philosophy of Physics
One of the most public episodes of gatekeeping in modern science was the case of so-called 'cold fusion'. At a news conference in 1989 the electrochemists Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons announced that they had found evidence of nuclear fusion in palladium electrodes loaded with deuterium. There was worldwide interest. Many groups sought to reproduce the results, most unsuccessfully. Within months, the prevailing view became strongly negative. The claims of Fleischmann and Pons came to be regarded as disreputable, as well as false. As the Caltech physicist David Goldstein put it, cold fusion became 'a pariah field, cast out by the scientific establishment' (Goldstein 1994). The case would already be interesting for students of gatekeeping if the story had ended at that point. Even more interestingly, however, the field survived and persisted. It has been enjoying a modest renaissance, with recent government funding both in the US and the EU. This piece offers an opinionated introduction to cold fusion as a case study of scientific gatekeeping, discussing both its early and recent history
title Gatekeeping: a Partial History of Cold Fusion
topic History and Philosophy of Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.09996