And gold physical vapor deposition on the coated shields for IR absorption - which is used in precision "ear thermometers".Hey now, it gave us Tang, WD-40, and Velcro at only a cost of a few trillion...
And gold physical vapor deposition on the coated shields for IR absorption - which is used in precision "ear thermometers".Hey now, it gave us Tang, WD-40, and Velcro at only a cost of a few trillion...
Meanwhile Russian astronauts used pencils.And the ever-popular Freeze-Dried Ice Cream plus the gas-filled ink cartridge write at any angle Space Pen...
And I would wholeheartedly agree if there was indeed any sort of indication that a fusion reaction could actually be self-sustained. Can you present any such evidence?How does the budget for fusion power which may yield huge benefits to the world compare with the budge for thing like space exploration which is interesting but maybe not of much practical value?
The simple fact that a wire glows when subject to sufficient electrical current seems like pretty strong evidence that a light bulb might be possible. Fusion power, on the other hand, requires nothing less than a leap of faith...I think they thought the light bulb was illusive. But finally we found success, among others some things have a way to becoming reality, finding what doesn’t comes first.
The sun and stars do it all the time.And I would wholeheartedly agree if there was indeed any sort of indication that a fusion reaction could actually be self-sustained. Can you present any such evidence?
I would've thought that the simple fact that every star in the universe uses fusion power to shine would be proof enough of its feasibility ...
The center of a star is subject to a constant, intense pressure which initiates and sustains the reaction. That pressure is due to gravity which is itself a constant acceleration upon matter (thus a force). Remove that huge "gravitational well" and the reaction ceases.The sun and stars do it all the time.
The conditions needed to achieve an overunity fusion reaction are well known.
It's just a very difficult technical problem to achieve that, not an impossible one.
And on what fact do you make that conclusion?excess energy input will always be a requisite for fusion reactions.
The temperature/pressure needed for the fusion reaction is well know.so specifically, which of these conditions leads you to believe that fusion power is feasible?
And on what fact do you make that conclusion?
...
So I'll ask you: What leads you to believe that is this problem cannot be solved?
It's just a technical problem to achieve that.
Well that's a thought. Only question is, can we really sequester ENOUGH energy to get anything useful out of it?We already have it! Just set up a boiler tank, and a concave mirror to focus sunlight on the tank, and there you have it.
I've been able to heat water for my tea with a solar reflector as described, so, yes.Only question is, can we really sequester ENOUGH energy to get anything useful out of it?
My reasoning is that the technical problems to achieve an over-unity fusion reaction can be achieved.And your reasoning?
My reasoning is that the technical problems to achieve an over-unity fusion reaction can be achieved.
You say it can't.
Neither of us can prove those suppositions.
But the world has always had plenty of naysayers so I'm sure you are in good company.
LOL, I was actually thinking in terms of powering a fusion process via "free" solar power such that overunity would somehow be achieved.I dry our laundry outside on a drying rack. Been doing that for 20 years. Where does the energy come from? I haven't received a bill for it yet.
Well please forgive my lack of optimism, but at this point we haven't even achieved 50/50 on Q-total. I don't see it in the theory and neither have any of the experiments seemed to have proven as much. I guess we'll just have to burn through few more billion before we find out for sure...A working fusion reactor (tokamak magnetic confinement) is an very hard engineering problem today, not a basic science problem. The real problem is not will it eventually work. The question is, will it be competitive on the energy market of tomorrow with other energy technologies? The fusion reaction is not over-unity in each pair of nuclei reaction sites in the plasma fuel. We are burning a fuel like in a ICE engine, a tiny drop won't run a V8 engine. We simply need to confine sufficient fusion fuel, with sufficient heat, with sufficient time, with sufficient energy extractors to extract a net fusion energy (energy output above energy losses) in excess of what it took to create those burning conditions. So we need more than just self-sustaining Fusion ignition, we also need the reaction mass to be large for greater than breakeven.
There are absolutely no physics show-stoppers on the way to net power output from a fusion reactor. If you think there are then please inform ITER about them so they won't waste those few billion.Well please forgive my lack of optimism, but at this point we haven't even achieved 50/50 on Q-total. I don't see it in the theory and neither have any of the experiments seemed to have proven as much. I guess we'll just have to burn through few more billion before we find out for sure...
What argument, other than saying it can't be done?You haven't even addressed my arguments,
But you, of course, are a peach of a fellow.I can only say that I feel great pity for anyone who has had to endure your toxic personality over the years.
One argument for running your manifesto past the person you disagree with is that maybe it’s all a big misunderstanding.
Maybe it is, but so what?
Say that somewhere in my brain I have a flawless argument that watermelon is bad. However, everyone who reads my Case Against Watermelon thinks I’m wrong. If they talk to me, I can clarify what I meant, and then they’ll often agree with me. But the writing alone never does it.
In this case, does it matter that I have a perfect argument in my brain? I don’t think so—most people will only see what I wrote.
The mistake here is seeing a counter-argument as being against a person, rather than as against a particular artifact. What matters is what’s out there.