Fusion Using Sonic Compression 95
The Only Druid writes "Scientists have confirmed the use of sonic waves to create the necessary compression in plasma to achieve nuclear fusion, far more effectively and cheaply than any other method. Val Kilmer was unavailable for comment."
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Interesting (Score:1)
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
Superconductivity? (Score:1, Informative)
You don't? Here's a good article [wikipedia.org]: "superconductivity is caused by a force of attraction between certain conduction electrons arising from the exchange of phonons, which causes the conduction electrons to exhibit a superfluid phase composed of correlated pairs of electrons." Check out Wikipedia sometimes, you will be surprised how many interesting things you can learn there.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Keep your shirts on (Score:3, Informative)
In any event, it's not Mr. Fusion. The amount of actual fusion is tiny, and well below any commercially or societally interesting level.
Re:Keep your shirts on (Score:2)
APS as arbiter of truth (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, well Bob Park shat all over it [aps.org] when the experiment was first reported, as he's want to do for anything not involving big-budget tokamaks.
There's a difference between being professionally skeptical and being openly hostile towards unexpected developments in science. I'm afraid APS/Park fall on the side of being high-priests of high-energy. A scientist must be both completely open minded and rigorously skeptical - those two qualities are not exclu
Context: Old Article (Score:2)
Did it release more energy than it absorbed? (Score:2)
Re:Did it release more energy than it absorbed? (Score:4, Interesting)
- Jim
And can it release it usefully? (Score:3, Insightful)
High temperatures are important. You can't run an efficient heat en
Re:And can it release it usefully? (Score:4, Insightful)
Something like this could work as a Mr. Fusion for deep space probes - it sounds like a perfect match. Deep Space probes typically don't even need that much power!
Even deep space doesn't help you (Score:2)
There comes a time to forget the nuclear phobia and go with plutonium RTG's or even a small fission reactor.
Re:Even deep space doesn't help you (Score:2)
Could you? (Score:2)
Really? Consider total mission mass. A reactor or RTG can run its heat source at a fairly high temperature, and the power conversion hardware and radiators are not very large. A low-temperature heat source would require a very large and heavy radiator; unless you have a very long mission, the RTG and reactor can beat it by just adding more fuel.
Now you've added a requi
Re:Could you? (Score:2)
As for Carnot efficiency and such, I kept my post rather vague on that point intentionally. There are devices that achieve near carnot efficiency, and such devices tend to be low power as well. In your example you mention a steam generator - I think we both agree that it is unlikely that a steam gener
Re:Could you? (Score:2)
Bull. Show me one. (Combined cycle hits about 60%, but that's not a pure steam cycle.)
Every bit of nuclear fuel we have has been hanging around since the formation of the Earth, 4.3 billion years ago. True, Pu-238 isn't good for more than about 50 years (half-life ~90 years) but we make it and we only use it because our primary missions only run about 10 years.
If the nuclear
Re:Could you? (Score:2)
The particular one I had in mind was in a physical document, not online. Remember, that for space use you will spend enough to use top of the line parts no matter what method you choose. Online, the best I could find was in this link:
http://www.naturalgas.org/overview/uses_eletrical . asp [naturalgas.org]
It has a micro-turbine generator available that is 80% efficient. (I don't know where that came from, the highest I had ever heard of was 70%)
As for the rest, we have never made any near a ce
Bogus number (Score:2)
You're comparing cherries and watermelons.
Re:Bogus number (Score:2)
My only caviot is that while an RTG would probably be a good bet, current designs would not acheive the lifetime I was talking about - and simply adding more material doesn't help that much. After sitting around for decades, radioactive material must be reprocessed (as in repurified) before it can be used in the same reactor. As I said, any sane person would not bet on this technology yet - but people were discount
Bogus concept (Score:2)
That's not true, and betrays a misconception. Reprocessing is required to remove fission products, whi
Re:Bogus concept (Score:2)
And, of course, what if you have a melt down (up?) in space? You might make it radioactive!
Re:Could you? (Score:2)
My recommendation: Do not throw out half the energy.
Clue time (Score:2)
Re:Clue time (Score:2)
Cogeneration can mean that, but it normally (well, for some values of normally) means that the waste heat from one carnot based cycle is used on another one.
Re:Clue time (Score:2)
Thanks for evading the question. Is 60% good or bad for that particular high-side temperature? Is it a large (good) or small (bad) fraction of the theoretical maximum?
You've just proven that you do not understand "Carnot cycle". Go take a course in thermodynamics and clear some of those misconceptions o
Re:Clue time (Score:2)
You can get within 90% of carnot efficiency with Stirling engines. Steam engines probably approach 80%, but I have no data to calculate that.
The quintessential example of the multiple cycle is a stirling engine (or thermoelectric pile) running on the exhaust of a turbine. Turbines are not efficient at getting the low temperature (under 200 C, say) energy out. No one uses a true carnot cycle, but most people do talk about heat engines as carnot engines. I suppose it is te
Re:Clue time (Score:2)
And you said this shortly after I gave you proof that the typical figure is closer to 50%. The turbines can recover 80% or more of the available energy in the steam, but the availability is nowhere near 80% of the heat input.
I suspect that you have no clue about the meanin
Re:Clue time (Score:2)
By the way, your actions label you as a dork. Thats why I get paid 10X what you do, because I can discuss things with people that have less knowlege than myself without making them feel stupid. If I have less knowlege than you on Thermodynamics (hey, it is possible), then try to educate me. Don't try to show me how much smarter you are than me.
However, I believe what is really going on is that we have both st
Re:And can it release it usefully? (Score:2)
ITER (Score:1)
Re:ITER (Score:2)
aren't we forgetting someone? (Score:1)
Re:aren't we forgetting someone? (Score:1)
Re:aren't we forgetting someone? (Score:1)
no! no! I'm not stalking anyone! I'm trying to get a comment from Elizabeth Shue, for slashdot a big online news website, on the recent use of senic waves to create compression in plasma for the purpose of starting a nuclear fission reaction. What? you never heard of slashdot? of nuclear fission? plasma? No, I'm not talking about a televisio
Re:aren't we forgetting someone? (Score:2)
Re:aren't we forgetting someone? (Score:2)
Good way to go in a movie, by the way - leave the science vague. That way you don't sound as dumb...
mumbo jumbo (Score:2)
"You don't believe in any of this cold fusion mumbo jumbo, do you?"
I loved that movie. Mindless, flashy fun. That, and Elizabeth Shue is teh hottie
Not really viable as an energy source (Score:2)
Re:Not really viable as an energy source (Score:1)
Re:Not really viable as an energy source (Score:2)
What you mean is that you cannot think of an application. I can think of several, some of which would probably work almost as is. For example, it could be used to heat interstellar probes above 4 K - you have to take all your energy with you because interstellar space has no energy sources available. It works best in the cold - perfect for some applications.
Please, please do not assume that there are no applicati
Re:Not really viable as an energy source (Score:1)
Other possible fusion reactors like ITER are huge plants which cost billions of euros and require an extensive amount of collaboration of many nations to build. Same goes for lasers, high-energy lase
Old news (Score:1)
Not cold fusion! (Score:1, Interesting)
The key to hot fusion is material density and temperature, containing the plasma is extremely hard.
Re:Not cold fusion! (Score:1)
So to me this sounds like a step towards cold fusion because you are using sound to compress the material, not fission. I think the 'hot' refers to radioactivity.
Re:Not cold fusion! (Score:1)
You're thinking of the H-bomb, whereby a nuclear fission bomb is the trigger for the fusion reaction (just like a conventional high explosive is used to implode the fissionable core to supercritical mass.)
ITER, for instance, and other torus reactors involve no fission whatsoever...there is no uranium or plutonium used. They operate by magnetic confinement of the plasma which is heated
Re:Not cold fusion! (Score:2)
I couldn't agree more - this isn't cold fusion, it's hot 'nano-fusion'. Let's start using the new name and see if it catches on.
Re:Not cold fusion! (Score:2)
Personally, I think it is fair to call anything that has an average chamber temperature below 100 C "cold fusion", because it is cold enough to make apparatus design safe and easy.
Remember, cold is a relative term. Compared to a standard fusion reactor, the center of the sun is "cold".
Re:Not cold fusion! (Score:2)
Re:Not cold fusion! (Score:2)
So in comparison to the only efficient fusion reactor we have (somebody sent us up the bomb), the natural reactors (stars) ARE cold fusion!
Val Kilmer? (Score:3)
Re:Val Kilmer? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Val Kilmer? (Score:2)
Funny. I thought it was a reference to 'Real Genius' [imdb.com].
Re:Val Kilmer? (Score:1)
The Saint (Score:3, Informative)
As a young orphan, a boy[Val Kilmer] refuses to accept the name given him by priests and instead chooses to take on the name of Simon Templar after the Saint of magic. Speed ahead and the young boy is now a master thief in bidding wars with countries for his services. Using his skills of master disguise, he eludes all pursuers as he assumes names associated with the various Saints. In this role after stealing from a Russian industrialist, the industrialist hires The Sain
Over my head... (Score:2)
The Saint (Score:1)
Re:Over my head... (Score:1)
Its a cheesy thriller movie, very little science, just 2 good looking actors getting it on. Worth a Friday night though.
Re: (Score:1)
I didn't watch it either... (Score:2)
Idea for fusion confinement (Score:1)
You mean Keanu Reeves (Score:1)
Val Kilmer built a giant death-ray laser.
Re:You mean Keanu Reeves (Score:2)
Re:You mean Keanu Reeves (Score:1)
Re:You mean Keanu Reeves (Score:1, Funny)
Seriously, though, yeah, you're right about the sonoluminescence thing.
Re:You mean Keanu Reeves (Score:1)
I think you mean... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I think you mean... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I think you mean... (Score:2)
Re:I think you mean... (Score:2)
Re:I think you mean... (Score:1)
Re:I think you mean... (Score:2)
published (Score:1, Informative)
Check the date (Score:2)
Oooh, this is recent.... (Score:2)
FOR RELEASE: IMMEDIATE
March 2, 2004
Why wasn't this posted 10 months ago? More importantly, why is it being posted now?
very old news! (Score:1)
Val? What about Keeneu Reeves? (Score:2)