Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: DIY fusion  (Read 4449 times)

Description:

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline blobranaTopic starter

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2002
  • Posts: 4743
    • Show all replies
    • http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/blobrana/home.html
DIY fusion
« on: November 21, 2006, 01:05:24 PM »
On the surface, Thiago Olson is like any typical teenager.
He's on the cross country and track teams at Stoney Creek High School in Rochester Hills. He's a good-looking, clean-cut 17-year-old with a 3.75 grade point average, and he has his eyes fixed on the next big step: college.
But to his friends, Thiago is known as "the mad scientist."
In the basement of his parents' Oakland Township home, tucked away in an area most aren't privy to see, Thiago is exhausting his love of physics on a project that has taken him more than two years and 1,000 hours to research and build -- a large, intricate machine that , on a small scale, creates nuclear fusion.

Read more

Offline blobranaTopic starter

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2002
  • Posts: 4743
    • Show all replies
    • http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/blobrana/home.html
Re: DIY fusion
« Reply #1 on: November 23, 2006, 12:42:19 PM »
Hum,
the deuterium is the difficult one  to separate, with all the hassle of  distilling at different boiling points, but luckily i think you can get it  via mail-order. Which i presume is exactly what the teenager did.

However just creating a neutron machine is still a long way short of  producing an overall gain in practical energy via fusion.
But it is early days yet i guess.