By soon I mean in 2-3 decades.
[quote]US researchers have achieved a world first in an ambitious experiment that aims to recreate the conditions at the heart of the sun and pave the way for nuclear fusion reactors.
The scientists generated more energy from fusion reactions than they put into the nuclear fuel, in a small but crucial step along the road to harnessing fusion power. The ultimate goal – to produce more energy than the whole experiment consumes – remains a long way off, but the feat has nonetheless raised hopes that after decades of setbacks, firm progress is finally being made.
Fusion energy has the potential to become a radical alternative power source, with zero carbon emissions during operation and minimal waste, but the technical difficulties in demonstrating fusion in the lab have so far proved overwhelming. While existing nuclear reactors generate energy by splitting atoms into lighter particles, fusion reactors combine light atomic nuclei into heavier particles.
In their experiments, researchers at the National Ignition Facility at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California use a bank of 192 powerful lasers to crush a minuscule amount of fuel so hard and fast that it becomes hotter than the sun.
The process is not straightforward. The lasers are fired into a gold capsule that holds a 2mm-wide spherical pellet. The fuel is coated on the inside of this plastic pellet in a layer as thin as a human hair.
When the laser light enters the gold capsule, it makes the walls of the gold container emit x-rays, which heat the pellet and make it implode with extraordinary ferocity. The fuel, a mixture of hydrogen isotopes called tritium and deuterium, partially fuses under the intense conditions.
The scientists have not generated more energy than the experiment uses in total. The lasers unleash nearly two megajoules of energy on their target, the equivalent, roughly, of two standard sticks of dynamite. But only a tiny fraction of this reaches the fuel. Writing in Nature, the scientists say fusion reactions in the fuel released at best 17 kilojoules of energy.
Though slight, the advance is welcome news for the NIF scientists. In 2012, the project was restructured and given more modest goals after six years of failure to generate more energy than the experiment consumes, known as "ignition".
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Thoughts?
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Cold fusion is already a thing, it's just being suppressed. Look it up.
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>US >First to cause nuclear fusion Another first for the USA. You're welcome, world.
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Nuclear energy isn't good.
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I think that sounds awesome. And fusion doesn't use radioactive materials so what happened at Chernobyl shouldn't happen ever again, and also fusion is probably the cleanest and most productive energy source that we can think of right now, so it'll be awesome if they ever get successful fusion reactors or whatever during our lifetimes.
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Edited by Verios44: 5/23/2014 2:02:00 AMWatch this video in FULL Its from EVE fanfest this year Topic space travel One of the main topics is nuclear fusion Interesting stuff AND presented by a leader in the field
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Let's hope it doesn't go down like the last tiem
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#Inb4Iran
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use THORIUM
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The word nuclear turns people off. That's all they hear when something like this is being discussed.
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The article is relying a bit on sensationalism, but honestly there isn't really any reported news anymore that doesn't. It's pretty cool regardless. Making it to the flatline point (energy in equal to the energy output) was pretty much the hardest part, so who knows how long it'll be until we have a net energy output? Here's hoping within the next few decades.
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They've been saying that for a while. Don't hold your breath.
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Laughs to self at how many people think nuclear fission and fusion are the same thing
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I fear for the weapons that will come out of this.
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You see that glowing behind the eagle? That's the US harnessing the power of the sun. World, you're welcome.
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It's all fun and games until Godzilla eats the first reactor.
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I thought we already used nuclear power. Didn't a fusion reactor break when Japan had an earthquake?
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Isn't this what was being said 30 years ago?
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Sounds safe and good for the enviroment. Lets do it.
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I think I've seen this. But it's totally awesome. Nuclear all the way. The energy of the future!
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ITT: People don't know shit about fusion.
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A job where you get to play with lasers and blow things up. I like it.
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It's thought that 4th generation nuclear power will be commercially viable by the 2030s. Which is phenomenally awesome.
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They've been saying stuff like this for a while now.
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They'll be saying the same thing again in 30 years.
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Yay another way of blowing the world up
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Interesting Alternative energy sources are soon gonna be pretty much necessary though so hopefully it doesn't take too long