A Life of Experimentation
Storms’ fascination with science continued during his time in university, where he majored in chemistry and eventually got into a new field of radiochemistry. Eventually, he landed at Los Alamos, where he worked on building a nuclear rocket.
While at Los Alamos, Storms was tasked with studying materials that could survive a nuclear rocket's very high temperatures and radioactive environment. Even though the nuclear rocket program got scrapped under the Nixon administration, he continued his investigations, this time in service of an effort to build a nuclear power source in space. This program also eventually ended, but Storms’ work to use nuclear power for space exploration continues to the present day, where he consults with NASA in their efforts. He considers nuclear power crucial to exploring the final frontier. “This would be the ideal energy source for use in space,” he told me, “I don’t think that it’s possible without this energy…We can send robots to Mars, but we won’t send humans to Mars until we have a source of energy.”
His work on nuclear rockets set the stage for his long low-energy nuclear reactions (LENR) career. In 1989, when Fleishmann and Pons publicized their cold fusion findings, Los Alamos was buzzing with excitement. As Storms told me, “Los Alamos recognized that this was very, very important, and the whole laboratory was involved.” Storms recognized the potential implications of such a discovery, but he wasn’t alone. He remarks that weapons development was tabled for some time as teams of scientists started working on cold fusion. When they shared updates in the laboratory’s main auditorium, there was “standing room only.”
Despite this intense interest, many efforts to replicate the phenomenon failed. But Storms’ own attempt succeeded. Among others, Storms worked with Carol Talcott, an expert in palladium hydrides who he would eventually marry. Storms built a sophisticated calorimeter and was able to replicate the excess heat effect. “Seeing this happen,” he recalled, “you know that this is real. You know that this is not an error.”
Despite his conviction that he was observing a real effect, Storms was puzzled and intrigued by it, because, he added, “You know, that that should not happen and it is in fact happening.” As he describes it, Storms got addicted to this idea and spent decades trying to solve the puzzle. But over time, it became less viable for him to solve that puzzle at Los Alamos, where interest in cold fusion had gradually waned as political priorities shifted. Around that time, Storms retired. With his wife, he designed and built a laboratory in their home in Santa Fe, which was still in view of Los Alamos. There, his cold fusion investigations continued.