Yet Another Method Of Achieving Nuclear Fusion 212
deglr6328 writes "Recent research has seen the use of the pyroelectric effect, the compression of bubbles using ultrasound and gas jet irradiation for producing nuclear fusion on small tabletop-scales. Yet another method can now be added to the list which uses ultraintense laser irradiation striking a borated plastic target to heat a plasma to billion kelvin temperatures and achieves aneutronic (clean) proton-boron fusion. (The PRL paper can be read online.) Though, like the other recently discovered exotic methods of attaining fusion, it does not look like a method which can be scaled up to ignition or even anywhere near break even, it still may have important use in the laboratory for the examination of such incredibly high temperature plasmas."
Sounds good... (Score:5, Funny)
Or in short YANF: Yet Another Nuclear Fusion
Other uses for fusion? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Other uses for fusion? (Score:3, Interesting)
The Farnsworth-Hirsch Fusor is often used as a neutron source for various atomic experiments. Info [wikipedia.org]
And how about fusion rockets?
Meet Project Daedalus [wikipedia.org]. While it doesn't use anything as low powered as sonofusion, it is a true fusion rocket. The idea is sound, but I'm afraid that the technology is still beyond us. Or perhaps more precisely, there's no good lab to test a ship like this. It's rea
Re:Other uses for fusion? (Score:2, Funny)
Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
Let us assume for the sake of argument, that we have implemented a form of nuclear energy production that leaves something relatively harmless behind, such as helium. When this process is put into practice the world over, the effect on our environment could be Very Bad.
No matter how we produce energy, we are doing so at the expense of the environmental balance that made sophisticated life on Earth possible to begin with. We threaten our own existence by producing energy. Perhaps we should be putting more research into ways each and every human can live happily while consuming *less* energy, rather than endeavoring to produce *more*.
There is intriguing evidence available today that suggests that the comings and goings of living beings on Earth regularly brings about disastrous changes in climate, triggered by release and re-uptake of CO2, methane, and the like. Whether we are accelerating this natural process with our energy production is a subject about which there is much debate, but learning how we can require less energy to live certainly wouldn't hurt!
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
One i know of is modern toilets, they use a hell of a lot less water than they used to.
Electric showers (vs the boiler)
home insulation (subsidised by british gas in the UK, iirc)
Either convince everybody they didn't really like that whole electricity lark anyway, or find a way to make more energy. The point of nuclear fussion is that its perfectly clean, and renewable.
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
You mean SUV ?
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
We have bigger homes that require more heating and cooling (even if these devices are more efficient).
Lets face it, other than a brief moment of inspiration during the Carter years, this country has been wasteful pigs about resources. We use a lot more energy and produce a lot more garbage than just 20 years ago per person.
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
We can actually cause less damage if we use tech wisely, rather than early farming methods.
Like making hamburgers out of eel instead of beef. Get rid of Pig and Cow raising and you would make a big dent on our impact.
What we have to do is try all the approaches; scale back consumption, find alternatives for current wasteful practices, new technologies to reduce pollution and produce energy.
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
This should be no different. If we want to use more energy, then we should do so responsibly. Any byproduct of any energy producing process would need to be monitored, and controlled.
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Uh, yes it is. It's a nuclear process and not a chemical one.
No matter how we produce energy, we are doing so at the expense of the environmental balance that made sophisticated life on Earth possible to begin with.
A chemical balance. Not a nuclear one. Or do you care to explain how you think the ratio of helium-to-hydrogen was essential in creating life? Keep in mind that helium dissipatates from the atmosphere.
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Uhhhhhh......why? I really think the new agey "everything humans do besides sitting in a ditch poking berries up thier noses is UNNATURAL AND THEREFORE EEEEEVILL AND BAAAAAD" nonsense is really dangerous magical thinking. We can't go back to the stone age just to make sure every last chipmunk lives a happy healthy full life and its just ludicrous to think so. Just because something is not cuddlyfuzzycute doesn't mean that it MUST somehow harm the planet. Helium is not a greenhouse gas, it is not an ozone depleting gas and it is TOTALLY inert. There is a reason its called a noble gas. I think we CAN manage Earth's resources wisely and we CAN produce the vast energies that will be required for the next stage of human civilization on Earth and we CAN do it without destroying the planet if we just use our heads and rigorously apply the scientific method.
Oh, come on. . . This is 'Insightful'? (Score:2)
I think this is an extremely distorted viewpoint. --I have met thousands of different people from all walks of life and the, "Magical Hippie" only makes up a tiny, tiny
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
It has been a destructive "straw man" argument for too long. We are doing a lot of dumb things right now. We may not find perfect solutions, but not having a perfect solution is no excuse to continue dumb things.
We need to start using more nuclear reactors. Look into low radiation nuclear power that can use the uranium we throw out from current reactors to produce energy. Nuclear waste regulation is kind of rediculous and tr
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
Look into low radiation nuclear power that can use the uranium we throw out from current reactors to produce energy.
Or we could just re-enrich the stuff or through it into a breeder reactor (ban on those was put into place bay Pres. Carter) this was in the original plan back in the 50s/60s, and toss it back in to our current reactors.
Nuclear waste regulation is kind of rediculous and treats
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
As a skeptic and a liberal I think it is sad that justified attacks on irrationality and anti-science nonsense are immediately seen as being synonymous with "an attack on the left". I hope it is not the case that "the left" has become so inextricably associated with the emptyheaded irrational brand of environmentalism that this is how it is seen by all other political groups, though judging from posts here, I fear this may indeed be the case.
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Dogs and cats sounding like clowns? (Score:2)
Helium is chemically inert. Doesn't react with anything. (And I mean anything, not "mostly anything, but it can be catalyze other reactions like we found out the hard way with Freon and other CFCs". Helium is not merely "inert und
Re:Fusion sounds nice, but... (Score:2)
> Perhaps we should be putting more research into
> ways each and every human can live happily while
> consuming *less* energy, rather than endeavoring
> to produce *more*.
If you have enough energy available, you can run a refrigerator to cool the earth and dissipate excess heat into space as EM. It's not a closed system.
I for one... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I for one... (Score:2)
Farenheit 10^9 (Score:3, Insightful)
When you're talking about billions of degrees the temperature scale is pretty irrelevant.
Re:Farenheit 10^9 (Score:2)
"Is that fahrenheit, or celcius?"
"First one, then the other."
Re:Farenheit 10^9 (Score:2)
Not so IMHO. There's a linear dependence between Fahrenheit and Celsius/Kelvin. While the constant term is meaningless with such high numbers, the ratio of 9/5 doesn't go anywhere. Fahrenheit 1e9 is roughly 6e8 Kelvin (or degrees Celsius).
Re:Farenheit 10^9 (Score:2)
I agree. However, I'd like to assume that when we're discussing nontrivial temperatures that only scientists deal with, we should assume that the scientific (i.e. Kelvin) scale is being used
Re:Farenheit 10^9 (Score:2)
So the difference between celsius and kelvin is trivial in the plasma ranges, celsius and farenheit still has a difference, but no one in their right mind uses farenheit to measure plasma temperatures anyway.
Re:Farenheit 10^9 (Score:2)
Laser irradiation method (Score:3, Funny)
Tell me more about this laser-irradiated Borat [boratonline.co.uk].
--Pat
Conduction to boiler water (Score:2)
Re:Conduction to boiler water (Score:3, Informative)
In a neutronic reaction such as D + T -> He + n high energy neutrons are transfer their energy to water and a steam turbine takes a little bit of that energy back out and coverts a little bit of what it takes into electricity. This is very bad for the environment as
Don't forget the grapes! (Score:2)
"scaled up"? How about "scaled down"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Uh... if scaling the laser pulse duration down to picoseconds allows one to scale the power down to 10 joules and get fusion events not even dreamed of by the ITER project, then why would you talk of it being "scaled up"?
It seems the next step is to scale down to femtosecond pulses to get the yeild up and the energy input down so you can approach break-even.
Depending on the scalng laws, you could end up with micro optical electronics systems that produce net-positive energy.
A p-B11 rocket engine might look more like a solar array producing a very bright light than a nozzle spewing mach diamonds.
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
Simple answer - hydrogen fused to helium has a "little bit left over" - this is the energy released.
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:3, Informative)
My question was, where does that "little bit left over" come from? You still have all the original particles in the system. The energy that was used to "squeeze" the particles together is then imparted on the remaining atoms/free particles.
So I went to look it up on Wikipedia, and it gave me an answer that was basically the same as I suggested:
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2, Informative)
Minor nitpick: as far as I know, the problem really isn't that the super hot plasma would melt the container walls, because the mass of the plasma is really really small (high pressure comes from temperature, not density). The real problem wit
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:4, Informative)
Basically, if you can overcome the electromagnetic repulsion forces that force the protons apart due to their like charges, the strong nuclear takes over and the two protons come colliding together at emense forces. If you're looking for an answer to what actually drives the Strong Nuclear Force, well, take a ticket and get in line. Once they figure that one out, we'll have figured out what make the "fundamental forces" fundamental, and know a hell of a lot more about how our universe is put together.
It's possible that Desktop Nuclear Fusion that yields positive energy to us is just around the corner. And with all of the discoveries recently on how the internals of the "subatomic" particles work, I'd say we're closer to it than we have ever been. But these are the kinds of things that simply can't happen overnight, and I guarentee that if anyone did come up with the solution, it'd take us 60 years just to get it into service. So many industries out there who rely on this kind of technology not existing. Imagine what all of the coal refineries, natural gas refineries, solar power farms, nuclear power plants.. they'd all instantly be out of business if this thing could even pull of a 1% positive yield. But of course, this is all speculation. My guess is that we're still a good twenty years off at least, and that the positive solution will have something to do with how neutrinos work/are produced.
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
Bah. We're always twenty years from nuclear fusion. We were in the '70s. Is there some kind of conspiracy among physicists to only develop fusion devices that are good for getting grants, but no good for scaling up to commercial power?
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
There are several ways to keep track of this energy (change in rest mass before and after, strength of the nuclear or chemical bonds, etc.). In the end, different configurations have different potential energies, and the difference must come out as kinetic energy .
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:5, Interesting)
Hey? Cars that run on electrolysed water - hydrogen cars - are all about moving the energy usage, instead of burning fossil fuels in the middle of cities on a road in an inefficient motor, use hydrogen cracked from water by a very efficient fossil fuel/whatever generator somewhere away from the city.
Of course cars running on electrolysed water, that make it from the energy they produce by burning the hydrogen from said water won't work, at least until we manage to get a perpetual motion machine working.
But does any of that mean fusion is bound to fail? A lot of people who are a whole lot more knowledgable than I am [iter.org] don't think so.
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
Yes, that was my point.
But does any of that mean fusion is bound to fail? A lot of people who are a whole lot more knowledgable than I am don't think so.
I certainly agree that fusion can work. My point is that fusion doesn't (and really can't) work on small scales. You give it X amount of energy a
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:3, Insightful)
Sounds familiar... (Score:4, Insightful)
The parent comment sounds similar to a lot of other myopic things people have said that turned out to be wrong, (i.e.: We can't fly, the world is flat, the sound barrier can't be broken, etc). Nobody remembers the names of the idiots who said these things.
If there is anything an education in science has taught me, it is that we humans have a pretty tentative grip on how things work, and there sure is a lot that we have to learn. Speaking of the strong nuclear force as though it were some insurmountable obstacle is ignorant.
Today's insoluble riddle will be tomorrow's household appliance.
Re:Sounds familiar... (Score:2)
Not at all. For example, I'm up this late considering thought experiments about the speed of light and superluminal velocities. The problem with the strict interpretation of Relativity is that Relativity states that we're simply changing the direction of our 4 dimensional vector when we "accelerate" instead of actually lengthening that vector. The question is, does a method exist through which that
Re:Sounds familiar... (Score:2, Funny)
We gotta hang out and get drunk sometime.
Re:Sounds familiar... (Score:2)
Especially since it is the electromagnetic force that is the obstacle. Strong nuclear force causes protons to fuse into helium when they get close enough, electromagnetic force keeps them from getting that close unless they are moving
Re:Sounds familiar... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:4, Informative)
You also assume that hydrogen is already available and its potential is 0 then you bring in the gravity and eventually the energy from the gravity gets emmited during fusion.
Some energy should have already been spent combining and 'creating' the hydrogen from the Big Bang soup of protons, neutrons and electrons. Of course the energy for the Big Bang should have come from some place, but that is another question [God anoyone? - *warning* lame flamebait attempt]
To release that energy you would need to break the nuclear bonds of hydrogen and then it will become helium. Think of it as wanting to get over a very tall mountain and on the other side there is a much deeper valey than the one you are on. But to get to the longer downward slope, on the other side, you need to overcome the upward slope in front of you.
In case of H and He transition, as someone already pointed out, the difference in the energy is just a little (the valey on the other side is just a little deeper than the one are on now). But when you have billions and billions of small differences -- they add up and you get the Sun (or an H bomb).
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2, Informative)
This needs some clarification. We are talking about nuclei here, not atoms. A hydrogen nucleus is nothing but a proton (p) and thus is not 'created' from the particles listed in the quote. The fact that protons themselves are bound states of quarks is not very relevant here. The energy scale of the processes discussed here is to low.
"To release that energy you would ne
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
I tried to say that the hydrogen (as an atom that has a nucleus) is already a system that has a tremendous amount of energy pent up as the strong nuclear force in it. The original post seemed to have assumed that hydrogen atoms are just somehow squashed by the gravity then it is that squashing potential energy that is released during fusion. (Much like a mechanical spring that is compressed then it heats up).
Actually everything is just differe
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:5, Informative)
Why does a Hydrogen Bomb produce far more energy in the fusion phase than is put in during the fission phase? My only guess is that the extra energy is coming from the energy released by the nuclear bonds during the forceful disintegration of the atom. Any physics majors care to chime in?
Ever wonder why all those protons like to sit happily in the nucleus together even though they're all positively charged? Well it turns out that at REALLY small scales there is a force called (aptly) "the strong nuclear force" which is about a million times as strong as electromagnetism.
The amount of energy it takes to liberate a single nucleon from a nucleus is called the "binding energy per nucleon". . For different elements this value is different. The reason fusion and fission can both release energy is due to change in this binding energy per nucleon from the start of the reaction to the end of the reaction.
If you look at this [nmm.ac.uk] graph you will see that at the begining of the graph it rises very steeply. The change from Hydrogen to Helium looks about 10MEV. This energy has to go somewhere and it's released as heat and light.
At around Iron the graph flattens out and then slowly starts to decend. Uranium sits right down at the bottom tail of the graph. Energy is released in fission because the end products sit further up the curve than Uranium.
Per reaction, Uranium fission produces a lot more energy than Hydrogen. Fission release around 250MeV and fusion releases around 17.6MeV. So why do we get so much additional power from a Hygrogen bomb? Well one mole [digitalfire.com] of Uranium weighs 238 grams. In contrast, one mole of hydrogen weighs only 1 gram. The conclusion? We have a lot more hydrogen atoms per unit mass than we do Uranium. This means that we get 17 times more energy per unit kilogram than we do from Uranium . This is the reason the primary power source for the Hydrogen bomb is the Hydrogen and not the Uranium starter charge.
Simon.
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2, Informative)
I think the yield from the original Mike shot was mostly from the huge uranium tamper. In the case of the Soviet "Tsar Bomb" the yield was mostly from fusion but that is because they (fortunately) left out the uranium tamper to reduce the yield from the p
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't forget of course that while stellar reactions are self-sustaining, it's heating/compression due to gravitational collapse that actually gets them started. Theoretically, there's no reason why we can't get self-sustaining fusion reactions through a similar process, although we're not trying to use gravity (of course!).
I don't think we are close to getting a reliable fusion power plant or ev
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
We already have 30+% efficient solar systems that could produce power at around 8c (or less) per kWh under large scale deployment. That's around 777MW / square mile * 5 h / day. The total surface area of the Earth is 197000000 square miles and more than
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
That's simply not true; fusion can output a lot more energy than it takes to compress the hydrogen (as is the case with a hydrogen bomb). The extra energy is not created, of course; it is also input to the reaction, but in a form that is normally useless. The extra energy is converted from the mass of the input hydrogen. You know, E=mc^2? Fusion releases that incre
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
You may be thinking of fission, which we already have quite a good handle on.
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:3, Informative)
NO IT DOESN'T!
The strong nuclear force holds the nucleus together and is opposed by the electrical force. It is the electrical force that causes the atom to fly apart and some of this force is converted into free energy.
As for the fusion bomb - the high pressure causes a number of the hydrogen - deturium pairs to fuse. This releases neutrons which transmute lithium into deturium. Some of these
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:4, Informative)
Nice idea, but, I'm afraid it's not like that. There are basically two forces involved here: electomagentic forces and the strong nuclear force. The EM force tends to keep atomic nuclei apart, since they are all positively charged. In "normal" matter they stay far enough apart to allow a bunch of electrons (negatively charged) to get in between and "screen" the charges. Meanwhile the strong nuclear force wants to pull nucleons together to make bigger nuclei. It's really powerful, as its name suggests, but also really short range.
The net effect of the interplay between these two forces (and some other considerations which I will overlook for now) is that the most stable (equivalently lowest energy) state for matter in quantities of less than a few solar masses (beyond which gravity starts to play a role) is as iron-56 nuclei. This is basically as many protons and neutrons as you can squash together and stillhave them all be in range of each others strong nuclear forces. Put in more and the electrostatic repulsion starts to dominate, put in fewer and the strong nuclear force would still pull in more if it could.
So, you can, in principle, get energy from any nuclear reaction that moves things towards iron -- fusion of light elements, or fission of heavy ones.
So, why is the whole universe not made of iron already? Basically the answer is that it got stuck!. When the universe was very hot and very dense indeed, it was a see of protons and neutrons constantly smashing into one another, sticking briefly to make nuclei and then being smashed apart by the next collision. The temperature was so high that thermal motion of the particles overcame the electromagnetic repulsion. When it cooled, it did so so quickly that the protons and neutrons didn't have time to form into iron nuclei, or indeed into many nuclei at all. That's why, before stars got into the game the universe was mostly hydrogen, with a decent amount of helium and only traces of other things.
Now, at the temperatures found in most of the universse, when two light nuclei collide, the electromagnetic forces cause them to bounce before they get close enough for the strong forces to make them stick. In a star, or a hydrogen bomb, or one of the pieces of borated plastic in this laser experiment, temperatures and densities are high enough that sometimes two nuclei smash together had enough to get past the EM repulsion and feel the strong force attracting them, whereupon they "snap" together, releasing a lot of energy.
If you want a very poor analogy, consider a room with a powerully magnetic roof a vibrating floor and a lot of ball-bearing. Initially, all the bearings are on the floor. Even though it would be a lower energy state for them to be stuck to the magnets in the roof. It we turn up the vibration (temperature), initially not much happens, but eventually we reach a temperature where a few bearings get close to the ceiling and are then pulled in hard by the magnets, releasing lots of energy as they "thunk" into the ceiling. This is what we are trying to do in a fusion reaction.
If we take the same analogy and turn up the heat still hotten, we recreate conditions in the original big bang. Now the room is full of flying ball bearings moving so fast that they are as likely as not to knock free any that get stock to the ceiling.
Home Kit (Score:2, Funny)
1) Dig a big hole
2) Obtain stock pile of Hydrogen Bombs
3) Drop a bomb into hole and detonate
4) Drop another bomb into hole in time to be detonated by the reaction of the first.
5) Repeat 4.
Viola! A Nuclear Combustion Engine.
BTW, that Big Giant fusion reactor they're building in France to go on line in 2016? 2016! Don't hold your breath. First its Pork. Second it'll likley be dropped for cost overruns, ir. more Pork. And third, even
ITER (Score:2)
It's not pork! Apart from the obvious fact that in France it would be "porc", the various conuntries and organisations involved in this actually have a pretty good
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
Err... Maybe because the mass change from H+H=He is higher than neutron+U235=>U236+more neutrons?
Re:Tabletop fusion isn't going to happen (Score:2)
Of course, if I wasn't simply running off at the mouth from tiredness, I might have written my post a little better, and figured out my own answers before posting. But what would be the fun in that?
Besides, the high energy physicists always have *so
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:5, Insightful)
Really? Have you done the equations for how powerful those methods are? Geothermal is probably the most promising, but the others simply don't generate that much juice. For example, the most powerful windmill in existence can climb to about 10 megawatts. In comparison, we've got quite a few nuclear plants [msn.com] up in the Gigawatt range.
Basically, none of these "alternate energy technologies" has sufficient power density to be a replacement for existing powerplant technologies. I realize that many people are wowed by the impressive size of some of the solar and wind farms, but it's very important to put them into perspective. As power density goes, they suck in comparison to a real powerplant. As power production goes, they simply don't have enough power generation area to produce an output similar to that of existing plants.
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
I agree that HDR looks like a promising option, but there are relatively few sites with both a thermal gradient steep enough, and enough permeability to be cost-effective. There's a nice collection of links here; http://www.dhm.ch/hdr.html [www.dhm.ch]. Not to say it shouldn't be developed, but fusion is more promising for some applications.
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with fission? (Score:2)
Then if we built the Integral fast reactor which was designed by Argonne labs and shut down in 1994 by the Clinton Administration - there is
Re:Why bother with fission? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
And if we wanted to, we could remove trade restriction on 3rd world contries (ie. remove our own agricultural subsidizing) we could create an economi around bio-diesel or other biological fuels. There is plenty of unused/inficiently used farmland around the globe.
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
If you're using existing waste that would well, go to waste, then I see a use for biofuels. But growing plants just so you can convert them to fuel and then burn them in an automobile engine? That's a series of inefficient processes. IMHO, it wo
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Still sounds a lot more efficient. How many employees do you need to maintain something that just sits there? Sounds like a choice between a few, cheap skilled laborers and a lot of expensive unskilled laborers. Plus, you don't have the massive investment of chemicals that are needed for farming. The only real thing holding solar power back is the infr
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
even solar cells from 10 years ago could convert 10% of the energy.
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Second, geothermal is a depletable resource, ie, once you e
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2, Troll)
Shame on you for pointing out that Nuclear Fission provides cost-effective energy with today's technology, already tested, and will scale up. ;)
But this is slashdot, and we all find future tech to be much more interesting.
Just today I was reading a proposal to fly wind turbines like a kite, tethered to the ground, to harness high energy winds. A rather interesting concept, although decades away from being implimented as a power source, even if it does pan out.
There is also a project that is plann
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
A single windmill does not a windmill farm make, any more than a single fuel element makes a nuclear reactor.
Put a few hundred windmills into a farm, and you have something that produces power at levels comparable to a nuclear plant. Yes, the power density is lower. So what?
The goal of cheap photovoltaics covering rooftops in sunny climes is perhaps the epitome of low-density power, and will likely be as difficult to attain as
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother with fusion? (Score:3, Interesting)
Kidding aside, as I like to help he planet I live on stay green, I see absolutely nothing wrong with nuclear energy in either form, fission or fusion. They yield a hell of a lot more power than any of the other solutions, as you could (in theory) extract a thousand years worth of power out of just one of the rods we're currently using, but fail to due so out of the now genuine concerns of nuclear power plant terrorism, ad nauseum.
What we need t
most important use for oil (Score:2)
Re:My friend Kelvin (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Desktop fusion (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Desktop fusion (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Desktop fusion (Score:2)
It'd kick ass if one would though! Think of all the fun to be had burning surgically neat holes through iron bars and drilling junk jewelry. The possibilities for fun destruction boggle the mind.
Re:Desktop fusion (Score:2)
Is this a physical limitation, or just something we can't do now? I remember reading about how much chirped-pulsing increased the power of tabletop lasers, and I'm curious if that could eventually lead to tabletop petawatt systems.
I tried doing some research online, but there wasn't anything that gave an obvious answer to my question.
Re:Desktop fusion (Score:2, Informative)
The work done by Taleyarkhan with deuterated acetone is highly disputed and later papers have argued that the neutron release was consistent with random coincidence.
Re:What about laptop fusion? (Score:2)
Re:Colliding Beam Fusion? (Score:2)
Re:I don't care how they drive the truck... (Score:2)
Howzat you say? Well, the sun is a fusion source that makes the grass grow, that powers the sheep that eats the grass, causing you to have mostly short grass.
(If all the grass is short, then the sheep will go hungry and you'll have to add additional feed - so then a farmer somewhere will have mostly short grass.)