Force Fields And Plasma Shields Get Closer 210
one2boo writes: "I guess watching countless hours of Star Trek has paid off for Mounir Laroussi, an electrical and computer engineer at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va. Space.com writes: 'Laroussi has literally put plasma on the table: devising an apparatus that creates a mini-plasma inside a Plexiglas cube by passing an electric current through helium gas via specially calibrated electrodes.' This advance in 'Plasma Shields' will allow the shielding and cloaking of satellites and spacecraft. Low-temperature plasmas could one day also make possible an entire new generation of miniature lasers and ultra-low-energy fluorescent light tubes. You can read more on this story here." And for some reason, the relatively low power requirements remind of me of the guts of the Improbability Drive.
"The Graduate" for the 00's: (Score:4)
Benjamin Braddock: Yes, sir.
Mr. McGuire: Are you listening?
Benjamin Braddock: Yes, sir I am.
Mr. McGuire: "Plasma."
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Great... (Score:3)
Let me know when I can get my own personal force-field. Hmm.. if they get thin enough and are not hot, we could have plasma condoms.
Remember kids. You shouldn't be having sex out of wedlock. But if you do end up doing it, remember to play it safe. Shields Up!
Ok.. I already doffed my extra point. That's one less that you moderators will get from me! Ha Ha Ha!
NOt likely (Score:1)
Yes, this was a *very* bad joke.
Dune? (Score:4)
Kinda similar except for the fact that in Dune, the fields stopped anything that was moving quickly too, so you had to slowly slip the knife into the field to kill someone.
Yum!
Rami James
Guy with sand in his pants.
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This will be used as a weapon (Score:1)
Research into this should not be performed by any scientist who believes he has any morality.
Bah... (Score:2)
Tinkering with things we don't quite understand and learning about them can lead to all sorts of breakthroughs and new understanding that can help in many other areas. Look at all the cool stuff that has come out of NASA's research. A lot of it really has helped people. It's not just screwing around.
Besides, there are many people researching cancer and other such things. But it would be silly to have everybody doing that sort of research. Then once it's cured, we're stuck with a bunch of biologists and such with nothing to do and then we have to send them back to school to learn how to be computer help-desk workers or something. It would be a sad, sad world.
Re:This will never work - flamebait at it's best. (Score:1)
Congratulations! A well laid flamebait - a work of art... Let's see how many will fall for this.
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"No se rinde el gallo rojo, sólo cuando ya está muerto."
Re:This will never work - flamebait at it's best. (Score:1)
Heh.. I'm _not_ a troll enthusiast, I just don't care about karma-whoring and don't give a fsck if some moron-moderator mods me down. I would actually like to ruin his flamebait... But, alas, I'm still adding to the posts of the thread...
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"No se rinde el gallo rojo, sólo cuando ya está muerto."
Re:Hey grammar nazi (Score:1)
Rami
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Re:translation.. (Score:1)
Ryan
plasmas are easy (Score:1)
More (Possible) Practical Applications (Score:5)
Second, fusion reaction containment. Since several plans for fusion technology seem to involve rather large heat generation, it'd be nice if this could be used to absorb the heat generated by the reaction and transmit it to generator equipment more safely (i.e. without frying the container). If the plasma is guided by magnetic fields (like so many things are), the extra energy should push the plasma bubble bigger, which can be used to induce currents directly. I'm guessing that this isn't a new idea, but I still think it's worth mentioning, especially since this would theoretically be one of the more efficient fusion->electricity conversions.
Either of these would be a huge advance (along with the rest of the stuff mentioned), so this is an impressive development indeed!
Re:translation.. (Score:2)
I'm only pointing this out to you, grammar nazi, because I want you to be the best damn grammar nazi you can be!
Re:This will be used as a weapon (Score:1)
the real weapon of the future is antimatter. just spill it and BANG. plus no fallout. and limitless scalability. just think what would happen if you dropped a bomb containing, say, a ton of antimatter on a planet. bye bye.
and i think that physicists with morality should work to foil those without...
micah
Re:This will be used as a weapon (Score:2)
Anything can be used for military applications, no matter how useful it is for benevolent endevours. If the fact that an invetion could potentially have a military "use" automatically means that moral scientists should avoid it like the plague, then the only "moral" scientists are those who limit themselves to stone knives and bearskins. (No, wait, stone knives can be used to kill people, too. I guess you're stuck with the bearskin, if you can get it away from the bear without using a stone knife, that is.)
--GrouchoMarx
low-energy fluorescent lighting (Score:1)
Considering we still haven't a source of light that is even close to efficent, that would seem a much better application than using the plasma for shielding.
Re:Bah... (Score:1)
--GrouchoMarx
Plasma shields (Score:1)
Not Quite Star Trek (Score:3)
Yes, I watch too much Star Trek myself, why do you ask? :-)
--GrouchoMarx
Re:That's right, byatch! (Score:1)
(Well, you did say "talk shit" so I am.)
Re:translation.. (Score:1)
2."best damn grammar nazi you can be" come on people - it's funny
3. isn't that -infinite- improbability drive?
4. Opprobrium incurred by failing to be a good grammar nazi is unfortunately greater than that of those who fail to produce an infinite improbability drive or at least a manned mars mission after so many years whilst Star Wars technology continues to flow freely. (and I do mean Star Wars, not Star Trek. Think Ronald Reagan)
U.S.S Voyager !?? (Score:1)
$ cat < /dev/mouse
Re:Not Quite Star Trek (Score:1)
We can do it, but it'll take 3 weeks....
You have 12 minutes
O.K. then send an away team to the planet. that always helps somehow.
Re:U.S.S Voyager !?? (Score:1)
(seriously, check it out)
State of Texas to invest in plasma research (Score:4)
DCUP spokesperson Dr Eric Mbunge sees a bright future for the penal application of cold plasmas. "With this technology we could execute prisoners by the batch, instead of one at a time," explains Dr Mbunge. "There would be this purple glow, and they'd all fall to the floor. Dead. It would be just like Star Trek."
When it was pointed out that Star Trek does not feature executions, Dr Mbunge responded, "It would if it was set in Texas."
The Department of Cruel and Unusual Punishments has not developed any new execution technologies since the introduction of the lethal injection in 1974. Its 1984 invention, the "microwave chair", was never used in Texas prisons because of fears that it might cause adverse health effects to prison wardens.
$ cat < /dev/mouse
Re:This will be used as a weapon (Score:1)
Only to the vessel (ie box) that's trying to contain it, or possibly to someone who somehow manages to stick their arm into it, and even then only if it's a hot plasma.
All a plasma is is a cloud of partly or completely ionised particles; nothing more, nothing less. Some plasmas aren't even that hot (the ones in flourescent lighting tubes, for example).
Cheers,
Tim
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:This will be used as a weapon (Score:1)
Wasn't that Collossus, or am I getting machines mixed up?
Plasma tube? Neon? (Score:5)
Excuse me, but to my understanding the ordinary neon fluorescent lamps also contain "plasma" (when they are lit), caused by "electric current vis specially calibrated electrodes"....
Re:Bah... (Score:1)
The patents are more informative (duh) (Score:5)
The article has a rather high hype-to-explanation ratio... so I went looking for the patent [ibm.com] they mention. Not so technical as to be incomprehensible, and more useful than the article, IMO. My first impression is that the advance here is the impedance matching system used to maintain the plasma, which allows the compact equipment and low power requirements. (I suppose it searches for the natural resonance of whatever ions you have between the electrodes... just find the lowest-energy state/standing wave at which it remains permittive/permeable.) And if you have low power plus no sealed chamber (1 atm, random molecular gases allowed), it pretty much follows that the result is a low temperature plasma, since plasma tends to radiate continuously. The scalability aspect is nice too... good for more than a toy.
Either I'm misunderstanding something, or the sterilization is done by the radiation from the plasma... basically just using the plasma as an efficient UV lamp. (The sterilization patent [ibm.com] talks about sterilizing liquids or gels up to 2cm deep... I can't see doing that with the surface interactions, which might be sufficient for polished tools and the like.) This doesn't appear to be sufficient for a low-volume irradiation system for food, which is unfortunate, because I like my hamburgers juicy. Oh well. (Of course, prions survive irradiation anyway, so I would still have to worry about BSE.)
There is also a separate patent [ibm.com] for "surface shielding". Might be fun to set up on your car :) I'm having trouble figuring out how the leakage from this system would be less detectable than the reflected radio waves it would disperse, though... I suppose if you do it right, all the radiation is absorbed by the gases you are ionizing?
Re:This will be used as a weapon (Score:1)
similar story with hydroelectric dams, too. They're clean but not necessarily very environmentally friendly.
Not that I mean to come off as an eco-nazi here. Just playing devil's advocate. I like my electricity.
Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma research (Score:1)
The fact that death penalty still exists is just another demonstration of how the ignorant masses are allowed to rule.
Re:Plasma tube? Neon? (Score:1)
Or no electrodes at all... a lot of fluorescent tubes just require an radio wave of appropriate frequency and magnitude... hold one near a power line some time.
The point here is *low energy* plasma, and no need for containment... neon in tubes is typically energized to about 10^4 C, and breaking the tube puts an end to the fun.
Space.com crap (Score:1)
Besides this, did anyone read the article and follow the links to see if the story checks out? "Plasmas are capable of shielding satellites": my ass, where's the link to the scientific background?
"plasma" links to a story about plasma propulsion, nice but irrelevant.
"energy systems like the deflector shields" link to a crap story about a medical doctor (!) working on a new Big Bang theory.
"Cold plasma's...
Please keep on posting this high quality space.com stories.
Set your phasers to 'hype' (Score:1)
Re:Set your phasers to 'hype' (Score:1)
Re:More (Possible) Practical Applications (Score:1)
Your suggested uses sound very much like the Langston field from _The Mote in God's Eye_. The first seems like a very bright idea, and it might apply in other situations where finished surfaces are exposed to high-velocity debris at relatively low pressures... self-cleaning rooms or fan blades with integrated ozonators would be cool :)
But I don't follow you on the second. [Hot] fusion already involves plasma and ways of handling plasma without touching it... how exactly does adding another layer of *cold* plasma help?
Re:Plasma tube? Neon? (Score:1)
Re:More (Possible) Practical Applications (Score:1)
Stealth (Score:1)
Re:Dune? (Score:1)
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great (Score:1)
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Safer choice than irradtion of food (Score:1)
Re:OT: Teflon pans (Score:1)
Re:Dune? (Score:1)
Re:translation.. (Score:1)
Re:Dune? (Score:1)
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Re:This will be used as a weapon (Score:1)
We Brits (and anyone else who ever discovered aything) have to stop trying to correct the Americans all the time and finally realise that they were, in fact, the first to do everything in the history of the world. Ever.
Not only did they invent the computer, they also invented the rocket, discovered Australia, invented government, the gun, Lara Croft and Television.
:)
troc
Re:This will never work (Score:1)
Basically there are two different approaches to research:
Re:Hogwash. (Score:1)
And we don't feel the need to prat around with silly AC prattle that adds nothing to a discussion except general anoyance and the feeling that one really should give in and start browsing at +1.
Yes, ok this was also a useless post.
heh
troc
Re:This will never work (Score:1)
Re:Plasma tube? Neon? (Score:1)
not sure that's entirely relevant.
troc
To light a flourescent tube (Score:1)
2. Plug in 9000 volt neon transformer
3. Connect to one side of output. Other side is not connected.
4. Hold flourescent tube up in the air. It will glow.
Re:Great... (Score:1)
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Re:Dune? (Score:1)
Still, it makes any army using these shields rather vulnerable against suicide attacks by even a single enemy. Considering how frequent such things are in wars, the shields would seem rahter useless to me. Still, it was a nice way to reintroduce large-scale melee combat in a future setting somewhat realistically.
Re:OT: Teflon pans (Score:1)
Aww come on, it's not that hard to cook rice!
We're talking about 'star trek' style technology and we can't even boil water without cocking it up!
Re:This will never work (Score:1)
Re:Plasma tube? Neon? (Score:1)
Ever get the impression that your life would make a good sitcom?
Ever follow this to its logical conclusion: that your life is a sitcom?
Nuclear power is clean, sorta (Score:1)
So given that
a) You don't live near the uranium mines, or are in any way dependent of the nature surrounding it
b) there are no more nuclear power plant accidents, ever
c) you don't live near the place all the waste ends up at (and don't worry about all the things that can go wrong with it for the next couple of thousand years)
then I suppose you can call nuclear power clean.
Re:low-energy fluorescent lighting (Score:1)
You worry too much about your job. Stop it. You are not paid enough to worry.
Fluorescent light bulb anybody? (Score:1)
Highway here I come (Score:3)
I want one!
Re:Plasma tube? Neon? (Score:1)
Maybe this is why Every room ive ever been in only has 3 walls, with the space where the fourth wall would be replaced with a black void out of which laughter and applause occasionally emanates, and why everythying stops for a week after a half hour of normal life, or maybe not. STOP LAUGHING VOID!
Re:This will never work (Score:1)
Re:low-energy fluorescent lighting (Score:1)
LED's are up to 55% efficient in converting electricity into light, Article here [photonicsonline.com] 55% is pretty darn good considering that say the light bulb is 5% efficient or so.
Re:The patents are more informative (duh) (Score:1)
Regards, Ulli
Plasma shields or "advanced erotic protectors" (Score:1)
Re:"The Graduate" (Score:1)
The Divine Creatrix in a Mortal Shell that stays Crunchy in Milk
energy mirror? (Score:1)
Re:Hogwash. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Plasma tube? Neon? (Score:1)
Great. So it should go perfectly with my Apple G4 Cube, and my Nintendo Star Cube, and my Sony GSCube....
(If I don't see the Cubes, they won't hurt me. If I don't see the Cubes, they won't hurt me. If I don't see the Cubes....)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Space.com crap (Score:5)
Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma research (Score:1)
It seems that someone always has to bring up some controvertial subject for everything. I just think thet I'm lucky and most of them get moderated to a -1, so I don't see them.
Thanks a lump for furthering the stereotype that Texans are a bunch of unremorseful, 6-gun wielding cowboys who have nothing better to do than kill things. The fact is, if you've ever been put to sleep (for an operation, dentistry, etc.), then you've felt as much pain as any deathrow inmate put to death in Texas since the introduction of the lethal injection. And how much pain did the pregnant mother that the guy stabbed to death feel? Hmmm...
luckman
Re:Dune? (Score:1)
Someone with my username just has to comment on this...
Military uses? (Score:3)
BUT - From what I recall, among other things the maximum power for a given laser is proportional to the number of excited atoms capable of radiating, i.e. the density of the gas in the case of a gas laser. With this kind of plasma-generating scheme, you would need a far smaller laser to get the same amount of power (Or conversely, you could get far more power out of currently-sized lasers).
The patent applications don't mention the use of carbon dioxide as a gas to generate plasma from - But I'm willing to bet that unless there is some strange property of CO2 that prevents this from working (probably not, given the variety of other gases listed), CO2 has been tried.
Carbon dioxide is one of the best gases for making high-power lasers. CO2 lasers are much more efficient than most other gas lasers, and are the easiest way for an amateur (or relative amateur, you still need glass-blowing skills...) to make a high-powered laser capable of cutting through numerous materials. (CO2 lasers are well within the range of a serious hobbyist, as opposed to some of the more exotic lasers in existence.)
Re:More (Possible) Practical Applications (Score:1)
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Re:This will never work (Score:1)
It's your kind of thinking that made it 'common knowledge' in the past that the world was flat, and the sun revolved around the earth.
Re:The patents are more informative (duh) (Score:1)
While I can't speak for the plasma device in question, I do know that many room-temperature plasmas devised for decontamination function by chemical means. The plasma forms highly reactive chemicals agents, such as oxygen free radicals, that can chemically alter target materials like sarin or VX.
Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma research (Score:1)
Re:"The Graduate" for the 00's: (Score:1)
Re:More (Possible) Practical Applications (Score:1)
One commonly-discussed method of generating electricity is to convert solar energy to microwaves in space, then "beam" it to Earth. This plasma would absorb the microwave energy; would it then be converted into electrical potential at the electrodes?
Even better, would it do the same thing with radioactive decay?
Judebert
Re:This will never work (Score:1)
Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma research (Score:3)
If you have any leads on the location of D-cup, please send me their name, number and a recent photo, and I will be sure to initiate a deep probe into the matter... ;)
Re:low-energy fluorescent lighting (Score:1)
I think the answer is - nowhere.
What I said in my first post is still true, generating light is still extremely unefficient when it comes to everyday usage.
If plasma were more efficient I'd happily use it.
OT Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma research (Score:2)
I know humor is a difficult concept, particularly for the humor impaired, but try to follow me here:
Texas has an execution wielding, social throwback of a presidential candidate in the form of "dub uh yuh", which they want to inflict upon the rest of the country. This raises public awareness of Texas and its social policies, which are by most people's definition very far to the right (many would say "extreme").
Better get used to the stereotyping. The govorner of Texas and his policies have made Texas ripe for it, just as the Kansas school board made Kansas ripe for their brand of stereotyping.
No one seriously thinks all Texans are idiots, but that won't stop any of us from mocking their more blatant absurdities, and a blood thirsty penal system coupled with draconian laws (at least one couple recently served time in Texas for living together unmarried, and at least a couple of people are serving life without parole for selling hemp of all things) is a better reason than most.
As long as Texas insists on behaving like a collective political and social idiot, with throwback social policies remeniscent of the 19th century, the rest of us will continue to snicker.
Wrong Order (Score:2)
certain kinds of energy weapons."
Hmm -- maybe we should work on developing those Energy Weapons before we start shielding our satellites against them?
Re:OT Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma resear (Score:2)
Re:More (Possible) Practical Applications (Score:2)
Someone help me out there.. (Score:2)
...how is this any different from the "plasma ball" device, which has been on the shelves of novelty shops for years, and which operates by passing an electric current through an inert gas contained within a plexiglas bulb?
The Tyrrany Begins.... [fearbush.com]
Re:Precious Gas (Score:2)
If ionization of some sort is not how CO2 lasers work, what is the mechanism? They're not light-pumped, the gas is definately excited by the electrical current...
Of course, if only a portion of the gas is ionized, it could be less efficient, since I recall the amount of amplification is proportional to the difference in the amounts of excited and ground-state ions... So there could be more ionized molecules, but even more non-ionized molecules sapping the efficiency.
Wish I had my EE 306 notebook with me...
Re:The patents are more informative (duh) (Score:2)
Re:OT Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma resear (Score:2)
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Re:low-energy fluorescent lighting (Score:2)
Re:Have your fun (Score:2)
Believe it or not I know how you feel. As an American who lived in Germany for a number of years (exchange student, summer intern, itinerant traveler), when I would admit to being American I was generally asked the same question (or some other stereotyped variation).
What most Americans don't realize is that, as Texas is to the United States, so to is the United States to the rest of the world.[1]
We'd better just develop a sense of humor about it, because everyone else certainly has.
[1] I think it is Robert Anton Wilson whom I am paraphrasing there, something about Texans being emberrassed about a (fictional) town called Bad Ass, while Americans in turn were emberrassed by Texas, while the Earth in turn was emberrassed by America.
How is this done without a vacuum? (Score:3)
Quoted from article:
Laroussi's process, specified in pending patent applications, is scalable; cold-plasma containers of virtually any size are feasible.Okay, I was about to poo-poo the article at this point, since it seemed like it was about neon signs.
Not that neon signs aren't interesting or neat, it's just that when Crookes invented his first discharge tube in the late 1800s, it was news. But it isn't now.
A neon sign; or one of those neat little high-voltage fireglobe things you can buy at The Sharper Image; argon, helium-neon and carbon dioxde lasers already use cold plasma at their cores, crystal lasers like ruby and YAG:ND use xenon strobes (cold plasma) to excite them. For that matter, the strobe lights in a dance bar or the electronic flash on your camera. Even the tiny little NE-2 and NE-2H glow lamps you can buy at Radio Shack for $2 are perfect examples of cold plasma, and as the array of devices I've listed will demonstrate, it's already very versatile and scalable.
Changing the gases inside the device will change the colors. Neon is usually an orangy-red, argon is green, etc. Different mixes of the gases (usually noble (inert)) will result in different electrical and optical properties.
No vacuum pumps are required, since the plasma is generated at normal atmospheric pressure.This is the part that finally made me stop, with some interest.
Plasma is easily creatable both in a vacuum and at atmospheric pressure. All you really need to do is excite a gas, generally using high voltage electricity. The higher the pressure of the gas, generally the higher the voltage required to excite it actually is.
Simply walking across a rug on a dry day and having static electricity jump from your fingertip is a wonderful display of atmospheric pressure plasma. But, like lightning, it's hot; if the spark were continuous, it would eventually burn you.
(As one example, I've built dozens of tesla coils as a hobby, and it's fun to pull a spark off the top of them, using only your fingertip [teslasystems.com] (use proper safety precautions if you try this). That's a great example of atmospheric pressure plasma. But the problem is, it gets damned hot if it arcs for too long to any given spot on your body.)
Consider the temperature of lightning. Fine, there's less energy involved here, so the temperature is less. But I can still pull an arc from my favorite tesla coil, using my fingertip, and then use my other hand to move pieces of paper into the arc. The paper catches fire almost immediately.
Cold plasma exists in neon lightbulbs and numerous other devices. But, at atmospheric pressure it's quite a development. I can't wait to play with it.
Re:OT Re:State of Texas to invest in plasma resear (Score:2)
So my quote was a little over-generalized. I should have said that 50% of death row inmates who did not have a DNA test at the time of the trial, but did have a DNA test subsequent to conviction, are innocent.
The fact remains that if you are falsely accused of murder, your best chance of getting off is if the real murderer left some DNA behind.
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