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An artificially excavated limestone pit in the south of France will soon host star-making technology, New Scientist reports. "If all goes well," the magazine explains, in a few year's time the pit will "rage with humanity's first self-sustaining fusion reaction, an artificial sun ten times hotter than the one that gives our planet life."
Reaching that point, however, requires an ambitious reformatting of the entire site, seemingly the very limit of landscape architecture: a kind of concrete gar
Anonymous said...
Yes? Really? Let us create a source of energy which burns 10 times hotter than our sun and house it on our planet upon which all life implicity depends on our sun burning roughly one time as hot as our sun.... and that it stays waaaay over there. Its ok we have limestone...And robots. Genius. Who oversees and allows these...endeavors ?
Construction of the facility began in 2007, and the first plasma is expected in 2019.[6]
n 2007 a fusion research team led by Fred Jaeger and Lee Berry of Oak Ridge National Laboratory achieved a performance of more than 87 trillion calculations per second, or teraflops, on the Cray XT4 Jaguar supercomputer at the National Center for Computational Sciences. The simulation provided insight into how best to heat an experimental reactor scheduled to begin operating in 2016 in Cadarache, France. The ambitious project, named ITER, is a coalition comprising the United States, the European Union, Russia, India, South Korea, China and Japan formed to provide the collective funding and scientific expertise needed to develop commercial fusion power plants.
ITER will use antennas to launch radio waves carrying 20 megawatts of power into the reactor, the equivalent of a million compact fluorescent light bulbs. The waves will heat the deuterium and tritium fuel to fusion temperatures—or more than 400 million degrees Fahrenheit. The deuterium and tritium form plasma, a state of matter created when gases become so hot that electrons get energized and fly off their atoms. As conceived, the radio waves would drive currents that help confine the plasma. Jaeger's simulations will contribute to understanding how to make the most of the wave power in both heating and controlling the plasma.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is a multiprogram science and technology national laboratory managed for the United States Department of Energy (DOE) by UT-Battelle. ORNL is the largest science and energy national laboratory in the Department of Energy system.[1] ORNL is located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, near Knoxville. ORNL's scientific programs focus on materials, neutron science, energy, high-performance computing, systems biology and national security.
ORNL partners with the state of Tennessee, universities and industries to solve challenges in energy, advanced materials, manufacturing, security and physics.
The laboratory is home to several of the world’s top supercomputers and is a leading neutron science and nuclear energy research facility that includes the Spallation Neutron Source and High Flux Isotope Reactor. ORNL hosts the Titan supercomputer; the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, the BioEnergy Science Center, and the *Consortium for Advanced Simulation of Light-Water Reactors.
Originally posted by TrueBrit Again, we have an experimental project, that has been so thorougly theorised that the finest minds in science have made thier case to the finest minds in accounting, and recieved funding from someone to build this space, and construct the apperatus of thier experiment. Just THAT investment means that the mathematical, and theoretical elements of the experiment are complete, and all that needs be done now, is a practical test to ensure the validity of the thinking behind it. At this point, for insurance purposes, the risks have probably been assessed by persons better qualified than us to do so, and have been deemed to be so insignificantly tiny, that they pose no more realistic threat than does a padded room.
Originally posted by Mads1987
Brilliant - lets just hope nobody figures out how to make it into a weapon. Hah!
Originally posted by TrueBrit
Surely you can understand how fustrating that is for those who want us where we BELONG along the scientific and technological timeline (that is at least forty years ahead of where we are now, colonising Mars, the Moon, and any solid object not so irradiated that we cannot even land on it).
Originally posted by TrueBrit
reply to post by Cecilofs
I am all for caution, but there is a difference between the caution that prevents disaster, and the flailing paranoia that such experiments always cause in those too ill informed to understand the simplest principles of the science around which the experiment they are crapping themselves about revolves.
Surely you can understand how fustrating that is for those who want us where we BELONG along the scientific and technological timeline (that is at least forty years ahead of where we are now, colonising Mars, the Moon, and any solid object not so irradiated that we cannot even land on it).