Bubble Fusion Results Replicated 83
Anonymous Coward writes "Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), Purdue University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), and the Russian Academy of Science (RAS) stating that they have replicated and extended previous experimental results that indicated the occurrence of nuclear fusion using a novel approach for plasma confinement. Interesting stuff, read about it
here."
Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:1)
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2, Interesting)
Not to unduly don a tinfoil hat, but will it be surpressed by oil companies until there's a worldwide oil shortage? And if so, it wouldn't be so "cheap" when they released it.
Tinfoil hats aside, I doubt something like this will get the funding it deserves.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:3, Insightful)
Basically what it comes down to, is that if this works, the cat is out of the bag.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:3, Interesting)
Oil companies like to be known as "energy" companies because it diffuses the appearance of their nearly-exclusive association with oil production. So, it's for PR purposes first off.
Much more important, investments in wind, solar, fuel cell and other alternative energy fields allow the oil companies some degree of control over the research in those areas (it happens fast, slowly, or not at all at their say-so).
Such investments
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:5, Insightful)
I will give you a clue. Companies care about making money. I swear I wish the extreme left and the libertarians both would get a clue. A companies job is to make money. The governments job is to make laws to regulate companies for the common good. Consumers make the decision of how much the will spend for positive behavior. It is like the outcry about outsourcing. You do not want outsourced tech support? Then do not buy a $500 PC. The energy companies do not care if it is from oil, gas, coal, or burning tinklies. The reason that they do not push for small-scale wind, solar, and biomass production is frankly they suck. solar has limited value in many places. The northern area of North America is one. I would like to see more solar roofs in the south. I would like just a 100 watt panel tied to the grid be required on all new homes built in the south. Wind is noisy, ugly, and expensive. Biomass has some potential but will never be a major part of the energy picture in it's current state. Now that bio mass converter I read about a while ago if it works could be very cool.
As far as the big oil companies stopping this research no they are just not putting huge amounts of money into it. Even if they where stopping it in the western nations what about Japan? They have no national oil reserves at all. I doubt that Oil companies could stop Japan or China from developing those technologies if they where practical.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
You
You say: The governments job is to make laws to regulate companies for the common good
You're aware that's
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:1)
Libertarians have a naive faith in laissez faire economics. We tried that in 19th century. Some markets may settle into a healthy, competitive environment. Others are vulnerable to market distortions like cartels, oligopolies and various barriers of entry to competition. While the far-left does have noble goals with their agenda, they're equally naive about the economic consequences of thei
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
No I am not a Republican. I am an independent. My wife is Democrat with a degree in political science. She seems to feel I have a pretty good grip on the political system.
Second Democrat does not equal "extreme left" unless you are a member of the extreme right which I am not. Some Democrat are moderate some are slightly left, some are extreme left, some are extreme right.
Frankly I have little use for the extreme left or right. As to the differ
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
Moving on, I never said democrat equals extreme left. Anywhere. You said extreme left. Furthmore, my boot was a metaphorical boot whose origin stems in how hard you just got smacked around knowledge-wise. Proof is not only in the original ignorance of your statements, but also in the fact you spent more time describing your 'credentials' than defending what you originally said again
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
As one very bright person put it on slashdot once. "I hope the Libertarians are watching this. If people can not behave in the Sims On line what chance is there in the real world?"
In the real world you can only expect corporations to do what makes them money. You can not expect them to act morally. They are things. Things do not have morals. Individuals can act morally but Corporations have so many individuals t
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:4, Interesting)
The government's "job" is to represent the will of the people. Only in Corporate America can you "consumers" be so brainwashed into believing the government exists to regulate the companies.
Wind turbines are quieter and more beautiful than a coal fired power plant, and less expensive than nuclear. The only people complaining about wind power are those with a NIMBY complex. I say stick a coal fired power plant in their backyard and see what they think about wind turbines then.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:1)
As for noise, I think you may be just flat out wrong about that; my experience at powerhouses is that there is almost no noise outside the fenc
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
How much space do you think a strip mine takes? Don't forget to include the tailings dam.
You can (and people do) use the land under a wind turbine for grazing and farming.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
How much space does an oil/gas field take?
"You can (and people do) use the land under a wind turbine for grazing and farming. "
Ditto for the oil and gas field.
I have to second the the power plant comment. I do not know about coal plants but the oil and gas plants I have been around are almost completely silent. While the turbines I have been around and read about in HomePower have lots of noise and vibration. In one
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:1)
I'm not going to say you can't find some report some where that in a particular case wind power could be cheaper than nuclear. But in the many reports I have read nuclear has always been cheaper than wind power. Also wind power is not viable in all areas and is not constant. There are significant losses if you have to store a large amount of energy for times when the wind does not blow.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
The problem is that you have to have them in EVERYBODY'S back yard. You can not build a single 10mw windmill. I have to question the cost vs nuclear also. No new nuclear plants have been made in years so we have no real idea how much a modern reactor like a pebble bed would cost. Plus you have the problem of storing the power from the wind turbines. You can not just crank them up to make more power
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
The government's "job" is to represent the will of the people.
That's your opinion. In mine, the government's job is to protect the rights of the people. If the people want to express their will, I don't see why they need the government to do it.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:1)
Why do you think the US is a democratic republic?
We elect people who are suppose to represent us. Unfortunately the way government has been working for a long time, does not follow that paradigm. It has become "how much can we get away with" not "what do the people want?"
I think the paradigm shift occured around the first world war, until then the US was much like the EU is now. People were Texans and Virginians before they were Americans, allegiances were to
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
You sir, are a sheep; an ignorant one at that.
Don't bother calling me "sir"; after an insult like that, I'm certainly not going to call you "sir". I'd love to hear you say this to my face, when you're not wearing your "Slashdot muscles".
Why do you think the US is a democratic republic?
Do you remember how Jefferson defined "democracy"? I seem to remember something in there about "the rights of the minority". And we are each of us a minority. Democracy is not unlimited mob rule.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:1)
Most studies I have read place the TCO of wind turbines at over 10p/kW compared to ~4p/kW for nuclear.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
Provide a source, don't just pull figures out of the air.
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:1)
Re:Cheap unlimited Energy for everyone! (Score:2)
Companies exist to make money, and they make money by being very highly specialized. Oil companies are only just beginning to make the transition to becoming "energy companies", and it is a sure thing that some of them will not survive the transition.
So energy companies certainly do care about where the energy is coming from, because they are currently highly optimized to generate power from oil and coal. It is harder for an oil company to switch to a new power source based on a completely different tech
Re:March (Score:1)
Re:March (Score:2)
Re:March (Score:1)
Any Immediate Application? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:1)
please feel free to berate me if i have got this wrong?
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:5, Informative)
That doesn't, mean the subject should be ignored, just that folks shouldn't get their hopes up over this process. (Added for the benefit of clueless ACs who might have difficulty with reading and comprehension.)
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:2)
For commercial power generation, the heat generated will have to be
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:1)
Having said that, it's actually not hard to imagine how energy can be extracted from this. The fusion will also produce heat. Your fuel is water, which, interestingly enough, is also the same substance used to turn steam turbines. Start your reaction, let the fuel get to superheated steam level, run it through a heat exchanger, and presto, electrical ene
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:1)
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:3, Informative)
On the other hand, there are always alternatives. It can probably be used very soon in low temperature environments.
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:2)
The weirdest thing about the bubble fusion story is that acetone produces neutrons, but water (even heavy water) does not.
Presumably now that the neutron results in acetone have been replicated, researchers will investigate the role of different molecular properties in neutron production rate. Why there should be a coupling between atomic and nuclear phenomena in this case is far from clear, but it is pretty clear now (although one replication doth not a science make) that some nuclear phenomenon is occur
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:2)
Either way, I think this is one of the most exciting areas of science at the moment.
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:4, Informative)
And even if they are, which I don't think is the case (the flashes last only 35 picoseconds), will the system be efficient enough to exceed break-even? I can boil water on my electric stove to drive a steam turbine, but not at sufficient power to run the stove.
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:2)
That would be because of thermodynamics...all the energy is coming from the stove, and some is lost as a matter of course.
Re:Any Immediate Application? (Score:1, Informative)
Even in a thermoelectric battery, powered by the heat generated typically from plutonium decay, the heat induces a potential difference between two different metals, which is then captured. You get the same thing if you take a chunk of the two metals and heat it with a
mwr (Score:2)
Re:mwr (Score:3, Insightful)
This story? In which country?
cmon guys... (Score:2)
Re:cmon guys... (Score:1)
Test Tube Nuclear fusion? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Test Tube Nuclear fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Test Tube Nuclear fusion? (Score:1)
So you are saying that you don't want vast amounts of energy... in your pants?
I did specify not in my back pocket!!!! I night on the Chillie beans can produce more than enough energy there
Bubble fantastic (Score:5, Informative)
Thursday January 20: Fusion Using Sonic Compression [slashdot.org]
Monday April 19 2004: Bubble Fusion Results Replicated by 4 Institutions [slashdot.org]
replicated (Score:3, Insightful)
Just what I need.. (Score:3, Funny)
Old news (Score:2)
Tritium Root Beer Float (Score:1)
The research subjects were noted to leave with a glow on as well.
More news forthcoming from Slashdot.... -JB
Fusion is not enough. (Score:1)
Re:Fusion is not enough. (Score:1)
Re:Fusion is not enough. (Score:1)
Re:Fusion is not enough. (Score:2)
The guy had it right.
Re:Fusion is not enough. (Score:2)
Not news (Score:2)
The quoted press release is from April of last year. Looks like someone's trying to get some hype for something.
Shrimps did it! (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe we will see the rise of genetically engineered shrimp that can live in the reactor and keep the system up for peanuts?
Here is a link on the shrimp How Snapping Shrimp Snap [utwente.nl]
Re:Shrimps did it! (Score:2)
This tiny bugger creates a cavitation buble with a claw that actually stuns prey with the shockwave generated. I couldn't believe what I was seeing when I first saw video of this.
Those are amazing shrimp. This sounds like serious B movie material. A tanker ship carrying heavy water sinks. Next thing we know, we're beset with nuclear snapping shrimp. An evil Beat poet reads something particularly inspiring to the shrimp and we lose the entire west coast...
100 Million K... (Score:1)
Yes its a dupe, but.... (Score:1)
News? (Score:3, Informative)
Only if..... (Score:1)