Clean Nuclear Power by use of Lasers
- Manoil
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Clean Nuclear Power by use of Lasers
<strong>[ Science -> Article ]</strong>
(omg, the sun is blue)
One is at the core of nuclear post-apocalyptia. The other, the core of every sci-fi weapon cabinet.
Just recently, it has been estimated that using extremely short laser pulses to ignite hydrogen and boron-11 would avoid production of neutrons (which generate radiation), resulting in an extremely clean form of nuclear power.
<blockquote><p><em>An international team of scientists are looking at a new way of creating energy from nuclear fusion. The process could result in no radioactivity, produce little pollution and provide a cheap abundant source of electricity. The Australian-led team of scientists have used computer models to simulate nuclear fusion without the extreme temperatures currently needed for other fusion methods. Their findings appear in the journal Energy and Environmental Science.
Emeritus Professor Heinrich Hora of the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of New South Wales, who is leading the research effort, says the process would rely on a new generation of extremely powerful and very fast lasers now being developed. "The key is a very carefully controlled extremely short laser pulse essential for ignition. The pulse would ignite a fuel made of ordinary hydrogen and boron-11," says Hora. "The idea of a hydrogen and boron fusion reaction is interesting because it wouldn't cause neutron production. Neutrons are a problem because they generate radioactivity."
Hora says his team were originally developing computer models using next generation lasers to duplicate the work being done at the new US$4 billion (A$4.34 billion) National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the United States.
The US scientists are developing what is currently the world's largest laser to ignite highly compressed spheres of deuterium-tritium fuel in a nuclear fusion reaction. The laser can produce a pulse of a few billionths of a second duration, which produces 500 times more power than all US power stations combined.
Hora's team originally rejected the idea of a hydrogen-boron fuel for their simulations "because the higher temperatures and compression needed, made it a hundred thousand times more difficult than the Lawrence Livermore approach, making it just about impossible".</em></p></blockquote>
If this possibility pays off, who knows what other technologies it could lead to, or how it could influence growth of other technologies?
Read the rest of the article here.
Spotted @ ABC Science
(omg, the sun is blue)
One is at the core of nuclear post-apocalyptia. The other, the core of every sci-fi weapon cabinet.
Just recently, it has been estimated that using extremely short laser pulses to ignite hydrogen and boron-11 would avoid production of neutrons (which generate radiation), resulting in an extremely clean form of nuclear power.
<blockquote><p><em>An international team of scientists are looking at a new way of creating energy from nuclear fusion. The process could result in no radioactivity, produce little pollution and provide a cheap abundant source of electricity. The Australian-led team of scientists have used computer models to simulate nuclear fusion without the extreme temperatures currently needed for other fusion methods. Their findings appear in the journal Energy and Environmental Science.
Emeritus Professor Heinrich Hora of the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of New South Wales, who is leading the research effort, says the process would rely on a new generation of extremely powerful and very fast lasers now being developed. "The key is a very carefully controlled extremely short laser pulse essential for ignition. The pulse would ignite a fuel made of ordinary hydrogen and boron-11," says Hora. "The idea of a hydrogen and boron fusion reaction is interesting because it wouldn't cause neutron production. Neutrons are a problem because they generate radioactivity."
Hora says his team were originally developing computer models using next generation lasers to duplicate the work being done at the new US$4 billion (A$4.34 billion) National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the United States.
The US scientists are developing what is currently the world's largest laser to ignite highly compressed spheres of deuterium-tritium fuel in a nuclear fusion reaction. The laser can produce a pulse of a few billionths of a second duration, which produces 500 times more power than all US power stations combined.
Hora's team originally rejected the idea of a hydrogen-boron fuel for their simulations "because the higher temperatures and compression needed, made it a hundred thousand times more difficult than the Lawrence Livermore approach, making it just about impossible".</em></p></blockquote>
If this possibility pays off, who knows what other technologies it could lead to, or how it could influence growth of other technologies?
Read the rest of the article here.
Spotted @ ABC Science
Last edited by Manoil on Wed Apr 28, 2010 5:46 am, edited 1 time in total.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fusion
"normal" fusion is usually deuterium/tritium fusion. Or solar fusion is whatever it can up to iron or so then boom.
Hydrogen/Boron-11 fusion is not a new idea.
"normal" fusion is usually deuterium/tritium fusion. Or solar fusion is whatever it can up to iron or so then boom.
Hydrogen/Boron-11 fusion is not a new idea.
I miss the good ol' USSA.
- Megatron
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yeah man uh thats called having a freaking kid jeez, you ever FUCK a sun?Gunbill wrote: In nuclear physics and nuclear chemistry, nuclear fusion is the process by which multiple atomic nuclei join together to form a single heavier nucleus. It is accompanied by the release or absorption of energy. Large scale fusion processes, involving many atoms fusing at once, must occur in matter which is at very high densities.
- Manoil
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The article did mention that it had been considered before, but the higher temperatures needed made it fucking difficult to borderline-impossible. If I'm not mistaken, it's the new laser technology that's making the reaction possible at low temperatures.MadBill wrote:Hydrogen/Boron-11 fusion is not a new idea.
Actually the latest issue of Scientific American contained an article regarding ordinary fusion which more or less said that it probably wasn't going to happen.MR Snake wrote:A lot of iffs.
Heard of Cold Fusion? They have been working on that for a number of years and lets not forget normal Fusion.
Edit: Creating fusion is possible, but actually using it as a reliable powersource has so many pitfalls it probably isn't feasible.
Yeah that was an interesting article, also somewhat depressing.Mismatch wrote:Actually the latest issue of Scientific American contained an article regarding ordinary fusion which more or less said that it probably wasn't going to happen.
Edit: Creating fusion is possible, but actually using it as a reliable powersource has so many pitfalls it probably isn't feasible.
I miss the good ol' USSA.
- Manoil
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Yeah, that had been more or less what I had heard.Mismatch wrote:Actually the latest issue of Scientific American contained an article regarding ordinary fusion which more or less said that it probably wasn't going to happen.MR Snake wrote:A lot of iffs.
Heard of Cold Fusion? They have been working on that for a number of years and lets not forget normal Fusion.
Edit: Creating fusion is possible, but actually using it as a reliable powersource has so many pitfalls it probably isn't feasible.
- Kickstand27
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as for cold fusion, regardless of snakes comment that scientists have been "working on thatt for a number of years", its actually gettting just looked at in a serious light again.. after those jokers hoaxed it, it got branded as the new age alchemy.
I myself have mixed feelings on looking into it again.. would it solve power probelms? sure.. should we be weilding that kind of power? not so sure.
I myself have mixed feelings on looking into it again.. would it solve power probelms? sure.. should we be weilding that kind of power? not so sure.
typos are bound to happen. fuck it
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Are you denying the fact that this has been a research topic for years? I should kick then stand on you.Kickstand27 wrote:as for cold fusion, regardless of snakes comment that scientists have been "working on thatt for a number of years", its actually gettting just looked at in a serious light again.. after those jokers hoaxed it, it got branded as the new age alchemy.
I myself have mixed feelings on looking into it again.. would it solve power probelms? sure.. should we be weilding that kind of power? not so sure.
Do these glasses and my two chins make me look sexy?
- Kickstand27
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oh, kick.. stand.. very clever..MR Snake wrote:Are you denying the fact that this has been a research topic for years? I should kick then stand on you.Kickstand27 wrote:as for cold fusion, regardless of snakes comment that scientists have been "working on thatt for a number of years", its actually gettting just looked at in a serious light again.. after those jokers hoaxed it, it got branded as the new age alchemy.
I myself have mixed feelings on looking into it again.. would it solve power probelms? sure.. should we be weilding that kind of power? not so sure.
has it been researched for years? i am sure it has..
have scientists that dont want to get ridiculed in the scientific community, that are hoping to get published or make an actual breakthrough on anything been researching it? not really.. like i said, after the Fleischmann-Pons deal, it was looked at like perpetual motion or alchemy: a pipe dream.
typos are bound to happen. fuck it
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- Kickstand27
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