Using a Toy Train To Calibrate a Reactor 120
alfredos writes "Physicists and engineers at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory built tracks inside a fusion reactor and ran a toy train for three days to help them with their calibrations. From the article: 'The modified model of a diesel train engine was carrying a small chunk of californium-252, a radioactive element that spews neutrons as it falls apart. “We needed to refine the calibration technique to make sure we are measuring our neutrons as accurately as possible,” said Masa Ono, the project head of the National Spherical Torus Experiment.'"
So what is this... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So what is this... (Score:5, Funny)
One of these days I'm going to have to set up my laptop right beside the drumset and read slashdot.
Gotta practice those rimshots.
(who knows, maybe one day I'll be a great sidekick on a late night talk show!)
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You'll also need a microphone and drums-to-speech software (or a website that hosts recordings of your drumrolls).
For being a talk show sidekick though, you'll only need the microphone (the kind that's always on).
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http://www.instantrimshot.com/ [instantrimshot.com] covers this just fine. :P
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Yeah. Then you can start researching 'reactor coolant' and 'reactor control systems' so that someday, in a few weeks, you'll be qualified to build your own nuclear reactor. Then you just need a ship for it to go in, but don't worry, after all that, it'll be destroyed by someone waiting outside of a jump gate.
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Ha, that reminds me that I need to take them up on their 5 free days offer just so I can switch my character to the next skill that will take a month to train to L5. EVE is almost as bad as Mafia Wars, I swear :P
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Ha, that reminds me that I need to take them up on their 5 free days offer just so I can switch my character to the next skill that will take a month to train to L5.
Unless they changed it back, CCP changed character training a while ago so that it stopped when the account expired.
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Doh! Grr, just as well. It's not like I haven't been this disappointed since... well, since Vendetta Online adopted the same licensing system from EVE :P
It used to be really neat to be able to jump into the game as a new character and run a few obscure and risky trade runs to upgrade to the biggest ship within a few hours. Lousy games that substitute stat grinding for skillz :P
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Nuclear reactor training?
Haha, that joke will have them all laughing at the Pwinceton Pwecious Wittle Pwasma Physics Wabowatowy, right before their milk and nappy time.
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More One liners...
* They need to make sure that the project is on track
* Wait, this isn't the land of make believe!
* And there they are, just chugging along...
* Is this a hold up? No, it's a science experiment!
* On that note, shouldn't it be pushing a DeLorean around?
* I'm surprised I hadn't heard anyone rail against this.
* all their findings have to start with "If the californium-252 train leaves the station at 5 o'clock..."
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* Wait, this isn't the land of make believe!
Oh wow... I sustain 3d6 Nostalgia damage. I loved that place.
For the uninformed, The Land of Make Believe [wikipedia.org] is a local New Jersey amusement park. Very small, family oriented, and lots of historical rides - the most famous of which is a rather impressive train.
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That may also be a possibility, but the more people hear about a local legend the better. d:
Aha! (Score:5, Funny)
You can use this just about anywhere. Now I have an excuse to bring the train into the office!
Boss: What's this?
Me: I'm calibrating the security cameras motion detection system. We need to know at what speeds the motion detection fails, lest the server room be broken into by someone with alot of patience.
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That how I use to sneak into the house back in high-school. I'd coast my car into the driveway and slow walk across the lawn. A five count per step was slow enough to keep the motion light (that was aimed at my light sleeping parents bedroom) from going off.
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... We need to know at what speeds the motion detection fails, lest the server room be broken into by someone with alot of patience.
But not if they have just alittle patience? Wait, that doesn't look right...
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/alot [wiktionary.org]
Done something similar (Score:4, Interesting)
I did this plenty of times in the Navy, except that they have a tube installed that circled the reactor between it and the detectors.
The tube contained the source and you moved it from detector to detector by pulling on a cable that was attached to both ends.
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Yes, during the precritical checkoff. I've done WAY to many of those. It was also required as part of the testing after replacing the source range detectors which I did as well. :(
Our source used to get stuck and it took a repeated action of a small push and then a hard pull to get it past some areas. The yellow water on the cable was not a good sign either
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So that's why they always insisted of getting ELTs involved... I always thought that those type of leaks were just a myth.
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Yeah, except you did for periodic maintenance to calibrate a piece of equipment older than yourself, not set up cutting edge equipment. That, and I don't think the equipment was sensitive to measure the difference of a few feet AND still work over twelve or thirteen decades. But that;s why they get the big grant bucks.
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That's all true, but on the other hand I bet they don't trust their reactor enough to build berthing areas 50' away from it either.
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In this context "decade" means a power of ten. Going from one count per second to 1000 counts per second is a three decade change.
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The hardest part was unbolting and rebolting the freakin' coverplate over the sourcebox. Stupid stupid design. And of course the silly gasket material that was just glued to the back of the coverplate... and never stayed glued. I always wished I could meet the guy who designed that torture box, and make him do a few pulls.
Here's to never having to do another precritical checkoff!
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I was about to mention the very same thing before I scrolled down and saw your reply. (Though I was an FTB, not a nuke.)
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Makes more sense than... (Score:5, Funny)
Oh. Right.
Spherical Torus? (Score:3, Interesting)
Those two surfaces are fundamentally different, topologically speaking. Would a spherical torus would look something like a 4-sided triangle? Or sound like one hand clapping?
Cosmic.
Re:Spherical Torus? (Score:4, Informative)
NSTX produces a plasma that is shaped like a sphere with a hole through its center (a "cored apple" profile, see Mega Ampere Spherical Tokamak), different from the "donut" (toroidal) shaped plasmas of conventional tokamaks. [wikipedia.org]
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Mmmmm forbidden radioactive doughnuts.
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Those two surfaces are fundamentally different, topologically speaking. Would a spherical torus would look something like a 4-sided triangle?
I was wondering the same thing: "a plasma that is shaped like a sphere with a hole through its center (a "cored apple" profile [wikipedia.org], see Mega Ampere Spherical Tokamak), different from the "donut" (toroidal) shaped plasmas of conventional tokamaks. This innovative plasma configuration may have several advantages, a major one being the ability to confine a higher plasma pressure for a given magnetic field strength. Since the amount of fusion power produced is proportional to the square of the plasma pressure, the
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Would a spherical torus would look something like a 4-sided triangle?
Triangle Man, Triangle Man.
Triangle Man hates Spherical Torus Man.
They have a fight.
Plasma Man wins.
Triangle Man.
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Those two surfaces are fundamentally different, topologically speaking. Would a spherical torus would look something like a 4-sided triangle? Or sound like one hand clapping?
Cosmic.
Hahaha.... and when you mod out by the commutators, they're still---oops! Sorry, I was math-geeking out there.
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like goatse man's ass, if his cheeks were well rounded?
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I think it's called a "spherical" torus because the design represents an evolution from a plain torus. You squash a donut into a roughly spherical space. IIRC the advantage of this configuration over a tokamak is that the stability of the plasma is improved. However there is a fundamental trade-off between stability and energy density, so these designs are less likely to be workable sources of fusion energy.
Scrooge McDuck (Score:2)
... did something like this in one story, I'm fairly sure.
Those toy trains are very versatile.
Casey Jones (Score:4, Funny)
Casey on the Californium Express
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ig3GcDBjQN4
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I've got a whole shelf in my garage full of Americium, I just don't know where to get rid of it.
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Dump it in Canberra... they would never even notice.
Use to spend a lot of time in Lower Templestowe.
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The proper response from a Lower Templestowe person would be to say "Dump it in Bulleen".
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You are right... especially if the wind is blowing westward... might get Heidelberg too!
I loved my years in Australia, but alas I am back in the ole USA once again.
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Casey Jones, streaming and decaying
Casey on the Californium Express
All aboard for the Little Lego Moderators.
Uncomfortable (Score:4, Funny)
I know the physicists mean well, and it probably gets the job done, but for some reason the notion that they use a toy train to calibrate a nuclear reactor would not make me feel more secure about living near a nuclear reactor.
Maybe if they'd used slot cars.
Hey, now there's a generational reference. Who among us remembers slot cars? And who among us is willing to admit it?
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Can't be *that* obsolete if you can still buy them in hobby stores. Best set I had when I was a kid had jumps and loops. Always found them rather boring compared to R/C cars, though, which you can get in the same scale now.
My grandmother had a set of mechanical slot tracks, that actually had a long chain that ran through a gully... you could stick pins in just about any matchbox car and race them around that track. Also pretty boring, but *there's* something so obsolete that would be a challenge to find
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Still some interest in them here [pacific.net.au]. My nephew lives near this one and had had his birthday there a few times.
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Slot cars? (Score:2)
So... You are saying that you were a kid sometime between 1912 [wikipedia.org] and now?
Or are you trying to say that you are Scottish? [imdb.com]
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I remember slot cars with great fondness... I think there might be a slot car track still in town.
I still have my Revell set in the garage, but the controllers are MIA.
That being said, how about using a Cadillac power antenna to move the neutron source in/out of a 5W teaching reactor? We had to do that when the safety office wouldn't let us use underclassmen to do it.
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> Who among us remembers slot cars? And who among us is willing to admit it?
Who said they ever went away? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nc39leiusGY [youtube.com]
Hmmm... I think I just decided what my nephew is getting for Christmas when he's at least 4 or 5 :)
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If she actually wanted the slot car set, your wife must be really awesome.
I tried to give my wife a PS3 and a copy of Red Faction Guerilla, but she was having none of it. I even tried the "but it's a Blu-Ray player, too!" approach, but she's too smart for that one.
It's the Atomic Train! (Score:2)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0144039/ [imdb.com]
Selling this to management . . . (Score:3, Funny)
"So you want to put a toy train in my reactor?" Condescending glare and awkward silence . . .
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Ran 3 days and didn't jump the track? (Score:3, Informative)
As someone with with years of experience in model railroading, that story is "real scary."
You mean to tell me you are going to count on a model train going around its tracks for 3 days straight without someone, at some time during the 3 days, to either have to give the train a nudge when it gets stuck, or put it back on the track?
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I remember reading that shortly after the Hornby Dublo model of a BR Standard 4 tank engine came out (in the 50s), one was used to take samples into an irradiation chamber. Unfortuantely I can't find it onlline, but I believe it was mentioned in an editorial of /Railway Modeller/ about 10 years ago. I believe in that case, they actually had a train, rather than a single unit, and the system remained in use for many years.
Trains under Christmas trees? (Score:2)
From the first line of TFA:
During the holiday season, many people place toy trains on circular tracks beneath their Christmas trees.
I've never heard of that before.
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Here, LMGTFY: http://images.google.com/images?q=christmas%20tree%20trains [google.com]
I just wish people would set up toy trains to carry dishes back to the sink... it was one of my childhood fantasies before I found out how expensive those toy trains were :P
Love the new look. (Score:1)
Atomic Train (Score:1)
Shining Time Fusion? (Score:1)
Link to the original article at the lab (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.pppl.gov/PPPLnews101.cfm [pppl.gov]
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Interestingly, that's a ColdFusion document.
To the guy in the photo...are you reading this? (Score:2)
And more reliable than the LHC! (Score:2)
Could we start using more stuff off the shelves of Toys'R'Us for our high energy physics devices?
Component Construction Models. Extension sets. Made of hardened plastic. Safe for kids.
A paper about this would make a brilliant entry for an Ig Nobel.
C'mon physicists! Let's set that K'nex plastic ball accelerator!
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No... but if you had said Meccano we might have believed you.
Trailer Park Boys (Score:2)
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nothing new (Score:2)
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Sorry, it was a red convertible.
Kink and Sausage (Score:2)
Glowing trains (Score:4, Funny)
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NSA agent 2: A radioactive toy train.
NSA agent 1: That's... hardly scary. How radioactive is it?
NSA agent 2: I guass if you licked it for a few days straight you might get a measurable dose.
NSA agent 1: What are they going to do wth it, run it into a squirrel?
NSA supervisor: HAVE YOU HEARD? THE TERRORISTS HAVE RADIOACTIVE TRAINS NOW! GO TO SEVERE TERROR ALERT LEVEL! CLOSE ALL AIRPORTS!
NSA agent 2: *sigh* That's what they're going to do: Tell us about it.
Meanwhile in a ca
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I'd bid for that. Unfortunately, I fear that it would probably cost a good deal more than 50 of any common currency unit. (I spent 30 "pint vouchers" on 2 copies of the Hornby [note] catalogue last year ... and decided that while a trip back to childhood pleasures would be fun, I really couldn't justify it. Well, I couldn't justify it while sober.
Also unfortunately, and prosaically, I would be surprised if the lab didn't hav
"it's" mother? (Score:1)
Half Life? (Score:2)
Am I the only one who looked at the that lab and rails and thought of Gordon Freeman "On a Rail"?
I thought so.
Reminds me of ... (Score:2)
radioactivity understanding fail (Score:2)
Gaah! Why does this misunderstanding persist? Generally, things which are exposed to radioactivity do not themselves become radioactive (and radioactive things do not glow green, for that matter).
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Yes, they do, or the shielding on reactors would not become contaminated over time, and a lot of secondary nuclear waste wouldn't be such an issue, and NASA would have an easier time shielding astronauts from solar radiation. It's not an instantaneous transformation: it's not like a flu virus or cooties, it takes significant exposure to high energy radiation.
Whether they glow is relative to the type and *amount* of radiation. I take it that you don't remember radium watch dials?
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Whether they glow is relative to the type and *amount* of radiation. I take it that you don't remember radium watch dials?
No argument about secondary radiation, but I think you'll find the green glow is a myth. Blue glow, yes - see Cerenkov radiation. I think you'll find that the radium watches work by energizing phosphor or some similar fluorescent material. In other words, it is the phosphor which is glowing green, not the radium itself.
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It depends on what form it is exposed to. If it is exposed to radioactivity in the form of a solid or dust or particulate material suspended in the air then it is quite possible for it to become contaminated.
If an object is exposed to radiation then it depends on the type. Neutron radiation is known for activating stable materials and making them radioactive while alpha, beta and gamma radiation generally does not.
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Chuff Chuff Chuff... (Score:1)
pure genius (Score:2)
I knew those engineers were hired for a reason
Toys (Score:1)
We did the same thing at DIII-D (Score:1)
I spent a summer working at the DIII-D tokamak in La Jolla, CA back in 2001, and this system was already in use. It had clearly been around for years, and the train (and track) had been packed & unpacked for the n-th time during a long period of scheduled downtime. Things were starting up again, and the neutron detectors had to be calibrated. It was my job to get the train working, making sure the connections were good by assembling the train outside of the chamber & sanding the aluminum (some of