macdoc
Philosopher
Is Lockheed not a build out of the Polywell concept.
So what's more unlikely ...
Man walking on the moon....
Regenerated spinal cords...
Fusion in 10 years...
We now have 2 of three.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-29645760
As in Revelation 1:1So what's more unlikely ...
Man walking on the moon....
Regenerated spinal cords...
Fusion in 10 years...
We now have 2 of three.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-29645760
The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him, to shew unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass
Compare units not weight.
One mole of fusion fuel is a few grams (4-10 depending upon fusion scheme).
One mole of fission fuel is around a quarter of a Kg (dependent upon metal used).
Each unit gives off an approximately similar amount of neutrons, and this comparison doesn't include the gamma emission considerations.
Is Lockheed not a build out of the Polywell concept.
While the rewards of fusion power are substantial, so are the challenges of making it a reality. The deuterium-tritium reaction is the easiest fusion reaction to initiate, yet the optimal temperature needed is 100 million degrees C, which is six to seven times hotter than the core of the Sun.
The key to producing significant fusion power is confining the plasma long enough at a high enough temperature and density for there to be a net power gain.
The international research community is currently working on a new experimental fusion reactor, called ITER, which will have a field strength of about 5 Tesla and a radius of 6 m. Overall, the ITER device is 60 m tall, weighs 23,000 tonnes, and has 80,000 km of niobium tin superconducting strands. Such a device does not fit on the back of a truck.
Despite the difficulties, progress in fusion power has exceeded the spectacular improvement in computer power. In the space of 30 years, power output has increased by a factor of more than a million. Present-day experiments have a power output of tens of megawatts. ITER will produce 500 megawatts of fusion power.
Lockheed Martin will need to show a lot more research evidence that it can do better than multinational collaborative projects like ITER. So far, its lack of willingness to engage with the scientific community suggests that it may be more interested in media attention than scientific development.
Matthew Hole is Australia’s representative on the IAEA International Fusion Research Council and Chair of the Australian ITER Forum, a consortium of scientists and engineers who support an Australian participation in ITER.
Lockheed Martin will need to show a lot more research evidence that it can do better than multinational collaborative projects like ITER
Okay thanks, why do you think the Polywell is a superior approach?
Fusion has always been 10-20 years away, because it would be far more accurate to say it's $80 billion away, and has been since the 70s:Fusion in 10 years...
http://bigthink.com/videos/fusion-power-just-30-years-away-againFusion Power—Just 30 Years Away! (Again) | Charles ...
bigthink.com/videos/fusion-power-just-30-years-away-again
Jun 3, 2010 - We've known this for 30 to 50 years. The joke in the fusion energy community is that fusion is always 30 years away
I don't understand. Are you replying to me? Why would you quibble about the number of years used as an estimate when I was disagreeing with the use of years as an estimate in the first place? Whoever said anything about blue lasers being impossible?And blue lasers are impossible.
Things change...get used to it.
Besides - the phrase was 30 years away, not 10, not 20 ...do keep up.
http://bigthink.com/videos/fusion-power-just-30-years-away-again
Well, I don't know that it is, but I like the concept.
I don't understand.
Me too. If anything, the results of both that and the new big Cadarache reactor should give us more clear path toward commercial widespread fusion.
Ah, of course. Don't know why I expected any different.that's obvious
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FREE ENERGY!! Whoo hoo! Using neutrons to heat water! Everyone knows neutrons will be free of charge....
You're welcome!Made me groan out loud. Now everyone in the office is looking at me.