ITER Fusion Reactor To See Further Delays, With Operations Pushed To 2034 (arstechnica.com) 112
John Timmer reports via Ars Technica: On Tuesday, the people managing the ITER experimental fusion reactor announced (PDF) that a combination of delays and altered priorities meant that its first-of-its-kind hardware wouldn't see plasma until 2036, with the full-energy deuterium-tritium fusion pushed back to 2039. The latter represents a four-year delay relative to the previous roadmap. While the former is also a delay, it's due in part to changing priorities.
ITER is an attempt to build a fusion reactor that's capable of sustaining plasmas that allow it to operate well beyond the break-even point, where the energy released by fusion reactions significantly exceeds the energy required to create the conditions that enable those reactions. It's meant to hit that milestone by scaling up a well-understood design called a tokamak. But the problem has been plagued by delays and cost overruns nearly from its start. At early stages, many of these stemmed from changes in designs necessitated by a better and improved understanding of plasmas held at extreme pressures and temperatures due to better modeling capabilities and a better understanding of the behavior of plasmas in smaller reactions.
The latest delays are due to more prosaic reasons. One of them is the product of the international nature of the collaboration, which sees individual components built by different partner organizations before assembly at the reactor site in France. The pandemic, unsurprisingly, severely disrupted the production of a lot of these components, and the project's structure meant that alternate suppliers couldn't be used (assuming alternate suppliers of one-of-a-kind hardware existed in the first place). The second problem relates to the location of the reactor in France. The country's nuclear safety regulator had concerns about the assembly of some of the components and halted construction on the reactor.
ITER is an attempt to build a fusion reactor that's capable of sustaining plasmas that allow it to operate well beyond the break-even point, where the energy released by fusion reactions significantly exceeds the energy required to create the conditions that enable those reactions. It's meant to hit that milestone by scaling up a well-understood design called a tokamak. But the problem has been plagued by delays and cost overruns nearly from its start. At early stages, many of these stemmed from changes in designs necessitated by a better and improved understanding of plasmas held at extreme pressures and temperatures due to better modeling capabilities and a better understanding of the behavior of plasmas in smaller reactions.
The latest delays are due to more prosaic reasons. One of them is the product of the international nature of the collaboration, which sees individual components built by different partner organizations before assembly at the reactor site in France. The pandemic, unsurprisingly, severely disrupted the production of a lot of these components, and the project's structure meant that alternate suppliers couldn't be used (assuming alternate suppliers of one-of-a-kind hardware existed in the first place). The second problem relates to the location of the reactor in France. The country's nuclear safety regulator had concerns about the assembly of some of the components and halted construction on the reactor.
No worries. (Score:4, Insightful)
We've undeniably moved closer to fusion power, from between 30 to 50 years into the bright future to between 30 to 50 years into the bright future.
Re: No worries. (Score:2)
In reality, fusion is probably 2-5 years away at this point. Thereâ(TM)s a reactor called SPARC being built based on known, boring technologies, just using REBCO magnets that should get us well over the line to meet energy gain (itâ(TM)s expecting Q_plasma=5).
Once that science experiment has been done the first power plant should be about 5 years after that. Theyâ(TM)re planning a reactor called ARC which is larger (though not insanely huge like ITER) and will include all the hardware to ge
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A short prayer is in order.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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As well as a few operations focused on excellent magnets.
Given the playing field, this ITER delay is probably the best possible news.
I'll predict this now: ITER will never see plasma and will be disassembled after commercial operations succeed at smaller scales.
If ITER finally brings us fusion the long, slow way, then I'll be happy to be proven wrong.
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Given the playing field, this ITER delay is probably the best possible news.
I'll predict this now: ITER will never see plasma and will be disassembled after commercial operations succeed at smaller scales.
ITER is sucking up money and talent from all over the world then getting them bogged down in international politics, meaning they are moving slowly and the rest of the world is hobbled in attempts to perform nuclear fusion research. The sooner this fails the better, in my opinion of course.
Delays at ITER might motivate some investment in private research but that still leaves interested parties seeking qualified talent, and likely a need to get a license from their government when they would be unintereste
Re: No worries. (Score:3)
There's a more practical issue with fusion. I'm excited to see it go forward from a scientific perspective, but almost everyone (including SPARC) is targeting deuterium-tritium (D-T) fusion because it's the easiest, lowest temperature reaction. The problem is the amount of tritium available. CANDU reactors produce some, but there are only a few of them in three countries, and they're all old. Combined, they produce something in the range of a few hundred grams to maybe a few kilograms of tritium per year, n
Re: No worries. (Score:2)
The 1.3x multiplication the reactor design provides is just there to maintain the supply. If we really wanted a bunch of tritium, weâ(TM)d build plants specifically designed to produce it.
Re: No worries. (Score:2)
I'd be shocked if it was quite that fast, but it certainly seems like breakthroughs in material science and modeling in the last decade dramatically simplified the problem to be solved. My hopes really changed when several well known fusion researchers more or less simultaneously either started companies or went private. It's a very "put your money where your mouth is" moment. Right now, I'm cautiously optimistic I might live to see a commercial reactor. We'll see though. As it turns out, keeping the sun in
Re:No worries. (Score:4, Informative)
This is why fusion is 50 years away
https://imgur.com/fusion-is-al... [imgur.com]
Basically this shit takes time and money, and it's not seen enough of either.
Re:No worries. (Score:4, Insightful)
Fusion isn't "50 years away", it was achieved in the early 50s.
"Fusion power" in the form of a "mr. fusion", or a "tokamak" or whatever, isn't 50 years away. Given our current capabilities, it isn't feasible at all, simply because there are too many conflicting requirements to deal with in a small volume.
The pretty imgur picture you've posted is wishful thinking without a basis in reality, unless you also produce the verified assumptions on which it is based, which you won't.
But it is often thrown around by people who do not understand the problem as a "proof" of something. It isn't, though, it is just a pretty picture.
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It's as much proof as your claims to the contrary.
If you're having a discussion, have a discussion. If you're gong to be anal about curating and proof, then be anal. But pick one, not both at once.
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I am not the one making an extraordinary claim, so I don't have to defend it (although, actually, I'm very much supported by the reality of fusion not happening).
You're the one making the claim by posting that picture, you're the one who has to justify it.
I'll even give you a hand, here is the source of your claims:
https://download.library.lol/s... [library.lol]
Please provide the reference for the black line and pick any "logic" from the paper that you like, and we can discuss it, just so that we're specific ;)
Re: No worries. (Score:2)
The only thing worse than a Fusion Nutter is a Space Nutter. You'll notice that these people tend overwhelmingly to be software-types and as such have unrealistic expectations from the material world.
Also, your link doesn't work.
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The only thing worse than a Fusion Nutter is a Space Nutter.
:)
Also, your link doesn't work.
Damn. Thanks, hopefully the one I re-upped works. It is basically the project proposal with those forward-looking estimates that everyone posts around.
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Updated link, as I was told the one above doesn't work.
https://file.io/3oL4T3yXmE4R [file.io]
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Har Har Har Har!
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Wut?
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Your post was funny. :P
Actually, it still is
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The claim that fusion is not possible, or as good as is a pretty extraordinary claim, regardless of whatever circle jerk you enjoy while making it.
JET got net positive kinda. ITER is aiming for Q>10 for sustained periods (several minutes).
You are essentially claiming that ITER will fail in this task, or that somehow ITER will succeed but it will be impossible to go beyond that. In other words you alone are smarter than all the scientists involved. That's a pretty extraordinary claim.
As for not possible w
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regardless of whatever circle jerk
Yawn, fuck off, dumbfuck.
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https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org]
Hey man, if you crank it in public, don't be surprised if someone notices.
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I notice that:
- you did not become familiar with the content of the article I posted and did not start a discussion based on what's inside
- you did not justify the claims that the picture you posted makes
- you switched to ad-hominems instead
As I said, you're stupid and need to have your mouth washed. Talk to you parents for help, although I'm guessing it is way too late already.
Re:No worries. (Score:5, Informative)
*sigh* this dumb chart again. Sorry, here we go...
The chart you are pointing to was produced in the early 1970s. At that time, the tokamak had recently been introduced and was the first device that clearly outperformed the Bohm diffusion limits and seemed to be free of instabilities even at working conditions. The Soviet systems were small and did not have auxiliary heating, so the US quickly took over leadership by applying money. They built a series of machines in the early 1970s, quickly surpassing the Soviet designs, and then started the design of a much larger system with the specific aim of confining a plasma stably long enough to heat to power production conditions. That design was PLT, and was under initial construction when this chart was produced.
If PLT did work, then what was needed would be three more machines. The first would increase the size and ensure that power scaled with size and magnet power as expected and no new problems arose. The second would be much larger machine that would run on D-T and produce actual net power. Finally they would add all the bits you need for an actual power plant and that would also be a commercial unit like Shippingport.
If you look at the lines, you can see the three machines. This is most clear in the green line, but also visible in the blue and yellow. The first bump on the green line is the completion and experimental runs on PLT. After that, starting in 1980, you see the construction and operation of the larger follow-on, which emerged as TFTR. The last two are the D-T system and commercial demonstration units.
The blue and yellow lines are the same development programs, just different timelines. The blue one, for instance, is based on starting the next machine before the last one is finished its experiments. This assumes that some problems will be built into the designs that will need to be fixed while they are under construction and thus you will need money to fix those and so they will cost more in total.
Notice that this entire plan is based on the assumption that the tokamak worked. And when PLT came online that certainly looked like the case. So construction of TFTR began. And that failed. And that's why the graph goes flat in the early 1980s, it was clear that there was no point building the next machine until the problems seen in TFTR were figured out.
At that point the entire graph became meaningless. Throwing money at the problem would not have sped it up. You can't pay people to be smarter.
So no, this graph does not tell us we have not spent enough money on fusion. It says we did not really understand tokamaks in the early 1970s.
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No we have not, it's a farce. There won't be fusion power plants in this century. We should spend the billions on things that work.
There won't even be enough tritium to fuel research plants including ITER.
Time to put this nonsense to bed and focus on real energy sources that work.
https://www.science.org/conten... [science.org]
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Doncha worry, in 30 years Phony Stark himself will be ferrying helium-3, tritium and cobalt thorium G in buckets from the Moon for all those reactors to power the GAI model training.
Until the crust of the Earth melts.
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Hopefully Phony wises up and realizes we have thorium here already, and that almost all our current reactors waste most uranium, using less than 1 percent of the energy that is there.
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Thorium ain't flying anytime soon either, I think, the US gubmint doesn't like anything that has "breeding" in it.
Who knows, maybe they have good reasons to fear it.
Shame they closed Culham (Score:2)
Lots of scientists will be left twiddling their thumbs.
Re: Shame they closed Culham (Score:2)
Iâ(TM)m sure that MIT/commonwealth fusion systems will be more than happy to offer them jobs.
Re: Shame they closed Culham (Score:2)
Culham isn't closed. JET, one of the two fusion reactors hosted on site, has been shutdown. MAST-U is still active.
Tokamak is the dumbest shit ever. (Score:3)
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Why the dumbest, I can think of at least a couple of things that are dumber.
For example, a phony stark cocksucker, or a donald trump supporter.
"I *love* ya, tomorrow, ... (Score:1)
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... you're always, ten years, *awaaayyyyyyy*!"
(to the tune of Annie's "Tomorrow" ... oh, forget it :) )
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It is "only 20 years away" for about 50 years now. (Score:2)
We hear the same excuses for like 50 years now. Is this some kind of scam?
https://www.space.com/when-wil... [space.com]
Here is a late Dr. Robert Bussard presentation at "Google Talks" about some fatal design flaws of ITER type reactors and possibility achieve fusion much simpler thanks to inertial electrostatic confinement fusion:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Bussard pitched several completely different designs over the years. All of them shared one quality: they don't work.
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Bussard pitched several completely different designs over the years. All of them shared one quality: they don't work.
There are some real issues. One of the first is We keep hearing about "Q" - the goal of getting more energy out than put in. They speak of initial thrusts to achieve a Q10 10 times more energy out than energy in. What we seldom hear about is Qtot, where the energy out is compared to the total energy used to generate the power that goes into the fusion device to the power out.
That is a much more sobering number, something like Qtot .01 Sabine Hossenfelder does a pretty good job explaining https://www.you [youtube.com]
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> So where we gonna get more Tritium? In juicy irony, we're going to have to build old fashioned fission reactors to supply it.
Google "lithium blanket tritium".
The JASON's report is actually pretty readable.
We will need the fission reactors to supply the startup load, and that will be a close-run thing, but not insurmountable.
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> So where we gonna get more Tritium? In juicy irony, we're going to have to build old fashioned fission reactors to supply it.
Google "lithium blanket tritium".
The JASON's report is actually pretty readable.
We will need the fission reactors to supply the startup load, and that will be a close-run thing, but not insurmountable.
Pretty much what I'm saying - And no - it isn't insurmountable. But it does put a bit of a kink in the Fusion power will create clean almost limitless power meme. Going to need good old fashioned radiation intense fission, probably one reactor for each fusion power station.
And fusion was never really clean to begin with, unless they have some new form of neutron. Seems they aren't saying the need for an old school fission reactor, it's one of those things like Qout versus Qtot. Qout is nice, but Qtot is
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No, use google to find out why lithium blankets on a fusion reactor won't make enough tritium. it's bullshit.
We won't have enough tritium to get a fusion based power grid, not even enough to power research until that (fantasized) day.
https://www.science.org/conten... [science.org]
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Bussard pitched several completely different designs over the years. All of them shared one quality: they don't work.
There's been a lot of technologies in the past that didn't work until they did.
As I recall the issue with Bussard's reactor was it wasn't big enough, then the efficiency would have grown to be net energy positive. It was a basic squared-cubed problem, energy losses were squared with size while gains were cubed with size. I recall it was more complex than that but that's a rough idea of the problem. That's why ITER is as big as it is, they can't prove the engineering with something smaller.
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> The last "debunking" of Polywell **I saw on YouTube**
Well there's you're problem right there.
Here is what a "debunking" actually looks like:
https://ses.library.usyd.edu.au/handle/2123/21070
Long and short: the reports made by EMC2 about stable virtual electrodes were wishful data interpretation, and it appears to be impossible to make them work without absolutely massive amounts of recirculating power which would make it effectively impossible to use for net power production.
Note that the University of
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Hubris is more likely than scam given the number of people involved.
People think they can do things they can't do all the time.
Meanwhile SPARC plowing ahead (Score:2)
Blue Origin Runs Iter (Score:1)
It's so confusing when these entities focus on performative public relations events instead of their chartered mission.
Blue Origin focused on putting Baldy With Cowboy Hat in space instead of delivering BE-4 engines to ULA.
Not both New Glenn (not a thing) and ULA's Vulcan are years behind.
ITER is so far behind it makes BO look timely. If nuclear fusion is realiistic it willl come far before 2030 but from a real player, not these Euro-trash maangers.
Sciene and research now sit as second fiddle to real comna
It's gone from research to a jobs program (Score:2)
It's like SLS. Bureaucrats trying to keep the money flowing to their voters and campaign contributors.
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No voter selects a candidate based on fusion research. Absolutely none.
But all the heavy industry companies who get money from the contracts give kickbacks to the legislators who approve it. It's pure graft and nothing more. It's a scam.
Fusion Funding (Score:1)
positively, it provides funding and community to fusion
Oh well... (Score:2)
There is no way to control fusion on Earth (Score:1)
Controlled fusion requires a star and every plasma physicist knows this. Controlled fusion research is fraud, plain and simple.
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we've had controlled fusion on Earth since 1950s. Not with net power gain but you need to be more specific
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This never happened.
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Ecological disaster, sure... but somehow that would still be one awesome power plant.
The smallest nuke ever made was about 10 tons in yield. You could actually do a fairly easy non-nuclear test of the concept with conventional explosives. I strongly suspect that to contain the blast you'd need enough water that it wouldn't be practical to capture any steam produced in the effort.
Then again, until recently I didn't think you could have a shaped nuclear charge, and those have been designed too. Including a
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The US government, not the Soviets, researched this under Operation Plowshare. It's "practical" in the sense that it would work. You actually want a bigger, not smaller, bomb as the efficiency goes way up with size, just like Project Orion. No one ever built one because it's stupid. We know this because you can't set off a nuke without tripping ever seismometer on the planet and alerting everyone to what you did. Certainly not it you set it off under Moscow. Coal and nuclear reactors are what the Soviets us
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> No one ever built one because it's stupid
No, because it's uneconomical. A review of the PACER project in the mid-1970s noted that the construction costs of the bombs was about 10 times as expensive as a normal reactor:
https://books.google.com/books?id=4QsAAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA18
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Assuming you don't have to fit the warhead in a bomber's bomb bay or in the nosecone of a rocket, you can build a nuclear explosive much cheaper. You can also use external detonators, like a z-pinch. This makes the bombs safer and cheaper. It also means that you can't use them as weapons.
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can't fuel ITER anyway (Score:1)
There is not enough tritium in the world nor production of it to supply ITER and research reactors. The miniscule amount made by CANDU reactors isn't enough, and no you can't just jamb a lithium rod into a normal PWR reactor
It's a not well thought out farce
Fusion Power Timeline (Score:2)
Amazing! We'll have fusion power in only ten years! This is the first time I've ever heard that! Why, yes, I am being treated for a traumatic head injury! How did you know?!
The delay is not that bad actually (Score:3)
"The 2016 Baseline envisioned achieving First Plasma in 2025, as a brief, low-energy machine test, with relatively minimal scientific value, to be followed by four stages of assembly and construction, achieving full plasma current in 2033. The new baseline envisions the Start of Research Operation (SRO) in 2034, featuring a more complete machine, to be followed by 27 months of substantive research. The achievement of full magnetic energy will be about 3 years delayed from the previous baseline, from 2033, now targeted in 2036. Deuterium-deuterium fusion operation is targeted for 2035, about the same time as in the previous baseline. The Start of Deuterium-Tritium Operation Phase will be about 4 years delayed from the previous baseline, from 2035 to 2039."
In other words, the 2025 mark wouldn't have yielded much science anyway .. so 2034 was the real date. With the new delay 2035 will start actual science ==more substantial than the 2025 start .. and full operations in 2039. ..So the real delay is only about 1 year or 5 years if you're pedantic.
Can you believe it. (Score:2)
ehhhh, hit the brakes.... (Score:1)
Re:The case against public sector research! (Score:4, Insightful)
The record of the private sector in fundamental research, of which this is an example, is worse still :)
Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:2)
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The book, "The Idea Factory", by Jon Gertner, is a good history of Bell Labs.
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You should check how much of all applied research done "privately" was being paid for by the government.
You'll be surprised.
Including, of course, Phony Stark's miracles, which are also almost entirely built with tax money.
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Is this an example of fundamental research? I thought this was applied research, seeking a means to produce energy rather than a means to seek knowledge of physics.
There's plenty of fusion reactors around the world for fundamental research, I believe there's several in the USA alone. I suspect at ITER they'd do some fundamental research in parallel but their goal was to find a means of applied physics for producing energy.
There's been a number of private companies in the USA seeking government money for r
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It is fundamental in the sense that its goal isn't a real production facility, or even a list of technologies and a guide how to build one, but rather a place to test various engineering approaches to achieve a whole bunch of goals, some of which are quite tangential to "fusion power".
There's plenty of fusion reactors around the world for fundamental research
Such as? There are two that I know of, ITER and NIF.
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This [wikipedia.org] is a list of just the currently operating tokamats.
NIF doesn't research fusion power. It's a weapons development program to eliminate or heavily reduce the need for testing regimes.
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Tokamaks are not "fusion reactors", they are, as the name literally says, toroidal chambers with magnetic coils.
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God, I hope you're a bot. A tokamat is a toroidal chamber with magnets for containing and heating a plasma to fusion temperatures. None of them hit break even but you can build a tokamat capable of fusion small enough a light enough to fit on a table.
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A tokamat is a toroidal chamber with magnets for containing and heating a plasma to fusion temperatures.
I don't know what is "tokamat", maybe it is something on your planet. It would be nice if you can post drawings and some theory, we can surely learn from your achievements.
On our planet we have a tokamak, a device that, it is speculated, can contain hot plasma magnetically so that fusion reactions happen in it. The ones that have been built or proposed are not "fusion reactors" in the context of power production, however. Moreover, attempts to operate them so far have produced very unimpressive results rela
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I don't know why my autocorrect on my phone kept changing it to "tokamat". But it did and I didn't notice it. Tokamaks are real. They have been built since the 50s. They do produce fusion reactions. As I said, none of them cross the break-even point (mainly due to plasma instabilities). That means they don't generate more power than they consume. But they still generate fusion reactions and have been used in research longer than your parents have been alive. They aren't toys. They are research devices.
Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:5, Insightful)
Last I checked, the only reason we have fission reactors is because the public sector took on the risk of building the first experimental ones. Taking large risks inherently means that you end up with delays and cost overruns. The private sector then get to sweep in and claim âoethe public sector is inefficientâ once all the difficult bits have been figured out.
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Last I checked, the only reason we have fission reactors is because the public sector took on the risk of building the first experimental ones.
Same with anything in space. It was the public sector in Germany [xkcd.com] which developed the foundation of rocket launches, which was then elaborated and expanded by the U.S. and Russia afterwards. Don't remember a single private company even considering doing anything similar.
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Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:2)
The blue LED was invented by one man working against his employerâ(TM)s instructions to stop. He continued anyway, on his own, using his employers facilities. Not a great example of private industry success
Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:1)
Who built SLS? It wasn't the government.
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Who landed man on the moon? NASA using private sector vehicles, as per usual. It's not one thing! Stop trying to make it simpler than it is, that doesn't work.
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Last I checked, the only reason we have fission reactors is because the public sector took on the risk of building the first experimental ones.
Last I checked, the only reason we had the public sector investing in nuclear research is because of war; otherwise, it would have been private institutions until a breakthrough was achieved.
Re:The case against public sector research! (Score:5, Insightful)
Meh this is just more bland "teh gubbmint bad" rhetoric.
The public sector is the only one that could possibly contemplate research of this type, that is basic research with very long timescales. Private companies do not engage in research like this.
Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:1)
There are currently 43 companies that are researching fusion through private investment.
The first fission energy plants (not used for bombs) were commercial and built from nothing to full production in about 6 years.
Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:5, Informative)
There are currently 43 companies that are researching fusion through private investment.
OK I'll bite. How many of them are (a) operating without government grants, (b) are producing actual hardware (c) at a scale likely to succeed and (d) not built on the research funded bu the government?
The first fission energy plants (not used for bombs) were commercial and built from nothing to full production in about 6 years.
Firstly, and most importantly, this is not true. The first nuclear power reactor was for a nuclear submarine. The first one built for electrical grid power was by the USSR. The first one built for full commercial operation was Calder Hall built by the British government.
Even if it were true, the answer is so? Commercial operators got in, doing what they do best after the government put in the basic research legwork. That's how the system works.
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> There are currently 43 companies that are researching fusion through private investment.
The only two private companies that have any hope of making a working reactor are CFS in the US and Tokamak Energy in the UK.
The first is an offshoot from a major research university, the other is an offshoot from the government-run nuclear research labs. Both are using a design originally developed in the Soviet nuclear labs, and then developed mostly by the US and European nuclear labs.
The other 41 companies (usin
Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:2)
Dr Michel Laberge of General Fusion not physicist-y enough for you?
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> Dr Michel Laberge of General Fusion not physicist-y enough for you?
The ink jet guy with precisely zero plasma physics or fusion background? Correct, he is *not* physicist-y enough for me.
Let's talk about GF, given it's the home team for me. GF's entire pitch is that they are simply updating a device called Linus that was built in the early 1970s. Linus didn't work, they claim, because they didn't have the necessary computer controls that would be needed to keep the collapse uniform. So Linus eventually
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There are a few projects pursuing plausible approaches but they are the minority.
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Okay armchair physicist.
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You can also look up Z-pinch M=0 ("pinch") and M=1 (kink) instability which rules out many of the designs. For the rest see how close their experiments are to meeting Lawson. (if not familiar, there is also a good wikipedia article - but basically it takes so
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> You will also find that under almost all conditions the synchrotron radiation
> of a p-B plasma exceeds the fusion energy production rate.
And for some time, it was believed it was *all* conditions.
When the new data that came out that showed this *tiny* sliver of positive energy, TAE was like "you see? it will work!"
It's funny that they didn't spend the previous two decades saying "you see? it can't possibly work!"
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Funny thing, when I and a number of other Science Fair winners got a tour of the Bell Murray Hill lab, most of the stuff we saw were blue sky research projects. But that was in the early '60s and I guess that modern companies don't plan any further than lunch these days.
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Woah woah what lunch? Again? Today? Are you telling me it happened again already?
Re: The case against public sector research! (Score:2)
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Private companies do not engage in research like this.
Not currently, but IBM and Bell Labs would very strongly disagree with you. Who knows where that kind of money is at now, but it used to be used for research.
Re:The case against public sector research! (Score:4, Insightful)
>As it is, it's a reminder that the public sector does not have a great record in this area...
You claim, *on the internet*.
Touche (Score:2)
Nice point; thank you
Re: (Score:2)
...a reminder that the public sector does not have a great record in this area...
On the contrary, almost every major technological breakthporugh that has found its way to commercial applications has been developed -or heavily funded- by governments.
Quoting this article [time.com] "The parts of the smart phone that make it smart—GPS, touch screens, the Internet—were advanced by the Defense Department. Tesla’s battery technologies and solar panels came out of a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy. Google’s search engine algorithm was boosted by a National Science Found