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6 votes
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Citizen science observation of a gamma-ray glow associated with the initiation of a lightning flash
5 votes -
Scandium superconducts at the highest temperature for a pure element
5 votes -
Nuclear fusion discussion
I'm a big fan of nuclear fusion as a concept and hope to shift toward doing active research in the field at some point. I'd like to open this discussion to talk about topics regarding nuclear...
I'm a big fan of nuclear fusion as a concept and hope to shift toward doing active research in the field at some point.
I'd like to open this discussion to talk about topics regarding nuclear fusion as a future energy source. To start, I'll lost a couple of ongoing fusion efforts I'm familiar with.
ITER:Of course the biggest fusion project is ITER, the massive multinational collaboration which is building a massive tokamak reactor in France. Unfortunately ITER will never produce power for average people, as it's purely a test reactor with no plans to be connected to the grid. The following effort to build a functional grid connected reactor, DEMO, isn't set to be built until at least 2050. This has resulted in a considerable number of private ventures trying iut experimental alternative approaches.
HELION:At the time of writing this, there's quite a bit of buzz surrounding Helion energy, both because of the ambitious timeline theyve recently proposed as well as the investment of Sam Altman of OpenAI fame. Helion uses an FRC topology, which I personally think is a really cool idea. Basically it's a tokamak without the physical shell around it, and is kept sustained by the internal plasma physics. Helion also has another interesting quirk, they are not pursuing the typical DT fuel strategy, but are instead planning to use DD fusion to breed He3 and use DHe3 fusion as the primary energy source. I think this is a good idea because DHe3 fusion is "aneutronic", whereas DT fusion produces high energy neutrons that are somewhat of an unsolved problem to deal with. I wonder though, how they intend to deal with the inevitable tritium pollution that DD fusion creates, and how they will separate that out before Iit creates neutrons anyway.
TRIALPHA:In addition, another major company TriAlpha Energy, also pursued FRCs, hoping to use an alternative proton-boron11 mix to achieve aneutronic operation. I think they've sort of pivoted toward being more a neutron source than working toward breakeven.
HB11: A recent proposed approach is HB11, which is also going for proton-boron fusion. Now with Tri Alpha this seemed really dubious, because hydrogen boron has a much lower cross section for fusion than other options, even the DHe3 that Helion is doing. In addition, boron has way more electrons than hydrogen, so a proton boron plasma has more electrons with causes more bremsstrahlung loss. HB11, however, thinks they can overcome this through high energy laser acceleration. They want to use a high power laser to shoot a fuel pellet into a target. This supposedly will work much better than heating the stuff, because the laser will impart a specific impulse and thus the thermal spectrum of the impact will have a much higher Q factor centered around the cross sectional peak. I'm not really convinced on this, just because I feel like that thermal spectrum would only last for the first few atomic layers of impact before it doesn't really matter amymore.
CFS: The next option I would consider to be one if the most popular fusion startups is Commonwealth Fusion Systems. They have what I'd consider the most conservative approach, they are attempting to build a Tokamak design like ITER, but hope to reduce the size considerably by taking advantage of advances in superconductor technology with REBCO tapes.
W7X:The next reactor type I'll mention was in the news a lot a few years back, the Wendelstein-7X in Germany. This is a stellarator design, the crazy twisted car wreck of a thing you may have seen before. The stellarator is shaped that way so that it doesn't require an induced current like the tokamak to have magnetic helicity, because the shape does that automatically.
ZAP:Another well liked dark horse is Zap Energy. They're not as flashy as the other reactors but seem to be working off solid physics that have been proven out over many years. They're trying to do sheared flow z-pinches, which is basically creating a lightning bolt that's perfectly straightened out and super dense.
DPF:One more somewhat obscure option is Eric Lerner's Dense Plasma Focus approach. I'm a little puzzled by this option because it seems to be the exact opposite of Zap, where they make an incredibly twisty lightning bolt instead of a straight one.
FUSOR/POLYWELL:There are a couple reactor types that get mentioned often but are more or less obsolete are the Fusor and the Polywell. A Fusor is a neat device that can be built to fit on a desktop and still produce actual fusion reactions, but has a fundamental design flaw of a physical electrode inside the plasma that introduces too much conductive heat loss. The Polywell is a more advanced concept thay tries to create a "virtual" cathode with orthogonal magnetic mirrors, but I think after many years of experimentation researchers were unable to validate the formation of such a virtual cathode.
NIF:One option that is sort of tangential is the NIF, which you might have heard technically produced more energy than it produced. I dont think its necessarily going to go anywhere, mostly because it's more a weapons program than an energy program, but I think the chirped pulse amplification technology they use is really cool.
GENERAL-FUSION:And finally I'd be remiss if I didn't mention the very highly funded and publicized General Fusion. I definitely give them points for pure childlike wonder. The original pitch was they were going to take a giant swirling tornado of molten metal, fire a ball of plasma into the eye of the storm, then smash the whole thing from all sides with a hundred giant hammers. To be honest is such a wild concept that I don't really know if it really makes any sense or if it's a fever dream. It's undergone a few revisions after finding out that certain parts of its concept just weren't going to work. This doesn't inspire a ton of confidence, but also shows flexibility in their thinking.
There's definitely lots of other companies with other variations, but this gives a general idea of the huge range of ideas and approaches being pursued. I think it's a really cool field to explore and I'd love to hear all your thoughts about it.
48 votes -
John Goodenough, part of Nobel trio in lithium battery hunt, dies at 100
12 votes -
The $21,000,000,000 hole in Texas - The Superconducting Super Collider
28 votes -
The physics of dancing peanuts in beer
8 votes -
Photosynthesis, key to life on Earth, starts with a single photon
5 votes -
The spool paradox
4 votes -
I am a cosmologist, AMA
Ok ok disclaimer, I am a cosmology PhD candidate, don’t have the degree yet. However I do feel comfortable at this point calling myself a cosmologist (I think for the first time ever). In any...
Ok ok disclaimer, I am a cosmology PhD candidate, don’t have the degree yet. However I do feel comfortable at this point calling myself a cosmologist (I think for the first time ever). In any case, with all the new people here, I think an AMA might be fun. I will try my best to answer all of the questions I get asked, but it may not happen quickly!
A bit about my research. I study the conditions in the early universe, specifically when the cosmic microwave background was forming, and I use CMB data to test our understanding of this era. The CMB formed roughly 300,000 years after the big bang, when the universe was 1/1000th its current size. The patterns that we see in the temperature fluctuations of the CMB can tell us a lot about the universe at this early time, and specifically we can try to use them to see if anything ‘unexpected’ happened at this time, like a hitherto undiscovered particle annihilating into ‘normal’ particles (for example).
Ask me anything about the early universe, or physics writ large, and I will do my best to answer!
51 votes -
The first few moments of an explosion can't be simulated yet. But there's a team at the University of Sheffield working on it.
12 votes -
Multi-layer reactive foil: no fuel, no oxygen, tons of heat
9 votes -
Ronald Reagan and the biggest failure in physics
5 votes -
How NASA reinvented the wheel
2 votes -
How medieval thinkers foreshadowed modern physics in investigating the character of machines, devices and forces
4 votes -
Prince Rupert's Drop exploding in molten glass
6 votes -
The gambler who beat roulette
12 votes -
Can water solve a maze?
11 votes -
“What If?” Eleven serious answers to slightly crazy science questions
3 votes -
A crucial particle physics computer program risks obsolescence
12 votes -
A new way to achieve nuclear fusion: Helion
5 votes -
US to announce fusion energy ‘breakthrough’
13 votes -
The turntable paradox: A ball on a spinning turntable won't fly off as you might expect. In fact the ball will have it's own little orbit exactly 2/7th the angular speed of the table. Here's why.
6 votes -
Sound
6 votes -
No one in physics dares say so, but the race to invent new particles is pointless
12 votes -
US physics body concedes mistakes in study of missile defense
8 votes -
How petrol pumps know when to turn themselves off
10 votes -
These metals destroy themselves to prevent rust
7 votes -
Physics duo finds magic in two dimensions
4 votes -
Gallium: The liquid metal that could transform soft electronics
7 votes -
LHCb (Large Hadron Collider beauty) experiment discovers three new exotic particles
11 votes -
Controversy continues over whether hot water freezes faster than cold
7 votes -
Prince Rupert's Drop exploding in epoxy resin at 456,522 fps
6 votes -
Powerful ‘machine scientists’ distill the laws of physics from raw data
19 votes -
How do these rocks move on their own in the desert? Ninety-nine years later... we solved it.
19 votes -
Nuclear waste is safer than you think
12 votes -
What "impossible" meant to Richard Feynman
7 votes -
Detailed footage finally reveals what triggers lightning
12 votes -
The big misconception about electricity
14 votes -
Dr Ken Libbrecht is the world expert on snowflakes, designer of custom snowflakes, snowflake consultant for the movie Frozen - his photos appear on postage stamps all over the world
6 votes -
Fractal ink jets that power spiral motion
2 votes -
Interactive Double Pendulum Playground
4 votes -
How close is nuclear fusion power?
8 votes -
MIT scientists report 'major advance' in fusion energy
21 votes -
Why things fall off cranes
6 votes -
Havana syndrome and the mystery of the microwaves
6 votes -
The new thermodynamic understanding of clocks
3 votes -
Lawrence Livermore claims a milestone in laser fusion, produces three times more energy than was absorbed by the fuel
16 votes -
Dispelling the myths of nuclear energy
10 votes -
Cheap material could help convert waste heat into electricity
7 votes