New Production of Plutonium 238 79
Saeed al-Sahaf writes "According to the New York Times (login req, but you can google for it as well), the Bush administration is planning the government's first production of plutonium 238 since the cold war. Federal officials say the program would produce a total of 330 pounds over 30 years at the Idaho National Laboratory. Officials denied that any of the classified missions would involve nuclear arms, satellites or weapons in space, but rather would power 'secret espionage devices.' Plutonium 238 has no central role in nuclear arms. Instead, it is valued for its steady heat, which can be turned into electricity. Nuclear batteries made of it are best known for powering spacecraft that go where sunlight is too dim to energize solar cells. For instance, they now power the Cassini probe exploring Saturn and its moons."
bugmenot (Score:2)
Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
I think...checking:
330lbs = 149,685 grams. 149,685 grams at 19.84 grams / cm^3 is about 7545 cm^3. The third root of 7545 is 19.6.
Can that be right? Wow. I knew it was dense stuff, but holy sh*t!
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
The smallest warhead made ("Davy Crockett") was a shoulder-launched, tactical size unit whose business end was the size of a cantaloupe.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
* Note: Yes, I know, it was originally an Illudium Q-36 model, but that was a long time ago; things change.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
http://www.barbneal.com/wav/ltunes/marvin/Marvin16
http://www.barbneal.com/wav/ltunes/marvin/Marvin04
Not one. (Score:2)
My guess would be that this is going to fuel thousands of small unattended ground sensors, not big devices. Because the are unattended, they need steady fuel for a long period of time, and because they are transmitting data (perhaps in an ad-hoc swarm manner), they will need need a moderate amount of energy.
So the correct slashdot cliche here is - in Soviet Russia a beowolf cluster of secrete espionage devices welcome you!
Reg Free Link to Article (Score:3, Informative)
Spacecraft RTGs (Score:4, Insightful)
My wife brought up the pollution aspect - not from polluting outer space (I explained already about the fact that space is far more radioactive than the plutonium is, we're not 'polluting' space). Rather, the Hanford (Washington State USA) processing facility created / processed lots of plutonium during the cold war and ended up creating massive environmental damage with radionucleides in the groundwater, soil, etc.
Where exactly is this processing plant and is the DOD allowing the EPA to supervise environmental maintenance/protection?
(Note: I don't care where it is; if telling me hurts security that's fine I don't need to know, but I don't want this kind of a plant showing up next door to me without someone having filed an environmental impact statement).
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:2)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:1)
Military applications, not NASA (Score:3, Interesting)
So what it sounds like is the goverment needs the plutonium for military applications, not for NASA since they can already get Pu-238 from Russia for NASA missions.
Re:Military applications, not NASA (Score:2)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:2)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:1)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:2)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:1)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:2)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:1)
In other words, the probabilities are very low of an accident occurring and even were one to oc
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:2)
Re:Spacecraft RTGs (Score:1)
There is a non-zero probablility that a nuclear reactor can be in cold shutdown and go (nearly) instaneously supercritical to meltdown. Similarly, there is a non-
Also good practice for breeder reactors? (Score:2, Interesting)
By using breeder reactors, we can have up to 40,000 years of energy.
Breeder reactors let you take U238, which is mostly useless for reactors, and turn it into Pu238, which is a great source of energy.
Maybe this is also practice for a larger project down the road.
Re:Also good practice for breeder reactors? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've heard that if the existing weapons-grade plutonium were converted to reactor fuel (by "diluting" it with other isotopes) we would have enough to last 250 years.
BTW, don't you mean breeder reactors produce Pu-239 instead of Pu-238? I've never heard of Pu-238 being used for fission before.
Re:Also good practice for breeder reactors? (Score:1)
Ooops. You're right, of course. Pu-239 is correct.
MOD parent up (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Also good practice for breeder reactors? (Score:1)
secret missions (Score:4, Funny)
Secret Missions? Come on, we all know that plutonium is the perfect fuel to produce the 1.21 Jigawatts that our flux capacitors need.
Pollute Canada (Score:2, Insightful)
"Federal officials say the program would produce a total of 330 pounds over 30 years at the Idaho National Laboratory, a sprawling site outside Idaho Falls some 100 miles to the west and upwind of Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming."
North and upwind of Grand Teton, eh? Sounds like we are going to be sending some pollution up Canada's way. On behalf of all Americans, I apologize.
Re:Pollute Canada (Score:2)
Ugh, I cannot believe I just made an "All Your Base" joke. I think I am going to be sick.
Re:Pollute Canada (Score:1, Flamebait)
Uh.. You don't speak for me at least. I bet there are a whole bunch more of us you don't speak for either. If you did, we could build somehting like this somewhere else that wasn't out of everybody's way and on the border with another country.
Not to mention that you make that statement with no facts to back it up... I have a good idea! <sarcasm>Let's just kick ourselves in the asses on the off chance it'll please some other country that gives some small portion of our popu
Re:Pollute Canada (Score:2)
"Federal officials say the program would produce a total of 330 pounds over 30 years at the Idaho National Laboratory, a sprawling site outside Idaho Falls some 100 miles to the west and upwind of Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming."
I read that "west" as "north" and deduced that the wind from the plant would be moving north into Canada, not west into my beloved home state of Oregon. OK I'll read more carefully next time.
Re:Pollute Canada (Score:3, Funny)
DIY is too expensive (Score:3, Funny)
If we're running low, why not just buy some more from North Korea?
Re:DIY is too expensive (Score:3, Funny)
Do they deliver?
Re:DIY is too expensive (Score:1)
Re:DIY is too expensive (Score:2)
2 hours? I think you mean 20 minutes.
Re:DIY is too expensive (Score:3, Funny)
Re:DIY is too expensive (Score:2)
Roughly half an hour delivery time, but they can't guarentee it'll get to the correct address. Kinda like Domino's.
As for pickup? Just look for the flash, then follow the sirens. Some of your order should still be in the area.
How much is that? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How much is that? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:How much is that? (Score:3, Informative)
FYI (Score:2, Informative)
Plutonium 239 is the one used in nuclear weapons and some nuclear power plants. Pu238 has a halflife of 88 years, and the decay mode is fission (so it outputs quite a lot of energy) or alpha emission. Quoth the wiki:
"The plutonium isotope 238Pu is an alpha emitter with a half-life of 87 years. These characteristics make it well suited for electrical power generation for devices which must function without direct maintenance for timescales approximating a human lifetime. It is ther
Re:How much is that? (Score:2)
Huh? What's that in hogsheads?
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Re:How much is that? (Score:2)
Its about time. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Its about time. (Score:2)
I think it's for much cooler stuff. Like a spy cellphone that runs linux with a standby time of 600 hours!
Re:Its about time. (Score:2)
Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush? Yeah, what pansies.
Re:Its about time. (Score:1)
Re:Its about time. (Score:2)
Those 4000 ICBMs are quite enough to make Earth uninhabitable several times over. You really don't need more.
Re:Its about time. (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
secret espionage devices? (Score:2)
So what exactly are they planning on spying where the sun don't shine?
Re:secret espionage devices? (Score:2)
There are any number of possible applications that could be powered by radio-thermoelectric generators.
Re:secret espionage devices? (Score:2)
Re:secret espionage devices? (Score:2)
There you go. Answered your own question. Now you won't need heated seats in your car any more.
One federal official (Score:1)
Thanks George.... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Sorry, but I think it will take decades for the United States to recover from the damage that this president is doing to our country.
George managed to blow of the Kyoto Accord in the name of economics, but have pissed off most of our trade nations in the process.
George invaded Iraq and didn't have the intelligence to know that there was no such thing as Weapons of Mass Destruction there. Making us look like a bunch of fucking idiots.
George continues to deny that there is any such thing as a human contri
A little worrying (Score:1)
"Officials denied that any of the classified missions would involve nuclear arms, satellites or weapons in space.."
Oh, good.
"..but rather would power 'secret espionage devices"
Man, is that reassuring.
How is it a good thing that it will be used for secret espionage rather than space warfare again?
There are no RTGs in orbit (Score:2)
Re:There are no RTGs in orbit (Score:3, Informative)
Re:There are no RTGs in orbit (Score:2)
Nuclear batteries (Score:1)