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On Sat, 10 Aug 2024 06:01:32 GMT, Jan Panteltje <alien@comet.invalid>
wrote:
>On a sunny day (Fri, 09 Aug 2024 08:56:44 -0700) it happened John Larkin>
<jjlarkin@highlandtechnology.com> wrote in
<esecbj1vp6cf0v0778gt00kut08div9dsm@4ax.com>:
>On Fri, 09 Aug 2024 06:38:37 GMT, Jan Panteltje <alien@comet.invalid>>
wrote:
>On a sunny day (Fri, 9 Aug 2024 02:18:17 +1000) it happened Bill Sloman>
<bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in <v92r4h$3fk7$1@dont-email.me>:
>On 8/08/2024 8:23 pm, Jan Panteltje wrote:>On a sunny day (Thu, 8 Aug 2024 17:13:36 +1000) it happened Bill Sloman>
<bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in <v91r78$3pjer$3@dont-email.me>:
On 7/08/2024 3:27 pm, Jan Panteltje wrote:Heating for fusion: Why toast plasma when you can microwave it!>
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/08/240806131216.htm
Carving a new path forward for compact fusion vessels
Date:
August 6, 2024
Source:
DOE/Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Summary:
Can plasma be sufficiently heated inside a tokamak using only microwaves?
New research suggests it can! Eliminating the central ohmic heating coil
normally used in tokamaks will free up much-needed space for a more compact,
efficient spherical tokamak.
Not so much carving a new path as looking for one. Maybe be gyrotrons
can heat the plasma enough, but planing to do experiment which can test
whether they can isn't exactly carving a new path - more just looking at
a possible new path.
>Bye bye ITER and that otehr fusion attempt mayonaise thing>
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/08/240806131357.htm
Researchers dig deeper into stability challenges of nuclear fusion -- with mayonnaise
>
Now all I am waiting for is a 10 year old kid doing a better than break even fusion experiment in its parents
kitchen...
You may have to wait a long time. Mayonaise may exhibit Rayleigh-Taylor
instability, but the lessons it might be able to impart would be
difficult to translate into totomak design.
I like that Farnsworth fusor thing
Of course you do. You are too dim to notice that it can't generate
enough energy to be a useful energy source - though it can be a handy
source of neutrons if you need them.
>
This spelled out if the link you posted, but clearly didn't read.
>They mention the grid gets too hot as a problem.>
Why not use a water filled pipe as grid,
heat the water to steam, drive a small steam engine
that drives a generator that drives a HV converter,
simple electronics, there is a table top experiment.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusor
so many simple ways to improve that setup!
But none are going to make it an energy source.
Yea, and planes could never fly as those were heavier than air.
There are solutions, some are simple.
I have been posting about that Farnsworth fusor many times, but your amnesia must have gotten to you again.
>
What will never produce energy is the large political job creation projects for albert onestone parrots like ITER is.
Or that laser fusion crap in 'merrica.
NIF is really about nuclear weapons, but the over-unity energy yield
is interesting.
Yes, but theequipment ises a zillio times more energy that is produced...>>>
Same for anti-gravity.
>
This is fun info too, previous thing you did not graps:
Carvings at ancient monument may be world's oldest calendars
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/08/240806131238.htm
comets causing glowball cooling?
>
As to solder, when was the last time your front limbs held a sodering iron?
Good question!
Yea, had not touched it in several days myself .. was repairing a watch...
need better tools, but it works again..
We are in for some nice hot days here, 35 degrees C here predicted for Monday.
95 F?
>
We're up in the mountains, in Truckee, and I'm not soldering here
either. It's hit 92F during the day but it's cold at night. Well, 92
above an asphalt road; it's cooler in the woods. It's dry so doesn't
feel very hot. We get occasional wafts of smoke, from the usual
California forest fires. We had a bear stroll down the street
yesterday.
I have a new intern starting soon, and there's so much to teach him,
including soldering.
>>
As to that fusor, some old electron guns from color CRTs.. good focal point, 35 kV should be no problem
need a good lab and mechanical man.
Maybe some electron guns from old film scanner CRTs, those used even higher voltages.
electrons; more basic and simpler than light.
Farnsworth was a genius.
>
Yes. He was a mostly unlearned farm boy who invented electronic
television near here, on Green Street.
>
https://noehill.com/sf/landmarks/cal0941.asp
It's not hard to build a particle accelerator to get some fusion, but
it's not efficient.
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