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March 11, 2010
Advanced And Delayed
Famulus at Prometheus Fusion has raised enough funds through Kick Starter to get the funds released for his amateur Polywell Fusion Reactor experiments. We look forward to the results in three months or so. Small fusion is doing well. Big fusion not so much. The roughly $10 billion ITER Project in France is being delayed again. By almost another year. Yeah. I know. Cue up the jokes. The scheduled start-up date for the ITER fusion reactor project looks set to slip again by 10 months to November 2019. The new date comes less than a year after the start-up was shifted from 2016 to 2018. William Brinkman, director of the Department of Energy's Office of Science, said at a meeting of fusion energy advisers on Monday that the schedule was changed at a meeting of ITER heads of delegations in Paris in late February.I can tell you from practical experience that fudging the dates like that means the project is in way more trouble than the people involved are letting on. And since from time to time there are people reading here who need to be brought up to speed on fusion I'm reposting my usual: You can learn the basics of fusion energy by reading Principles of Fusion Energy: An Introduction to Fusion Energy for Students of Science and Engineering Polywell is a little more complicated. You can learn more about Polywell and its potential at: Bussard's IEC Fusion Technology (Polywell Fusion) Explained The American Thinker has a good article up with the basics. And the best part? We Will Know In Two Years or less. I'm a big fan of small fusion projects. Especially after hearing what Plasma Physicist and author of Principles of Plasma PhysicsDr. Nicholas Krall said, "We spent $15 billion dollars studying tokamaks and what we learned about them is that they are no damn good." And they seem really hard to build even. And who knows, if the Polywell experiments being done by the US Navy or Famulus are successful the ITER project may just wind up as a big hole in the ground in France.
posted by Simon on 03.11.10 at 04:40 PM
Comments
Bob, A few years back Vincent Page of GE made the same point. And I haven't even gotten into the problem of fuel breeding. In theory it is possible. But the margins are so slim that in practice it may not be. M. Simon · March 12, 2010 10:13 AM Post a comment
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The problem with tokamaks is much worse than the fact they don't work. Back in the 1970s, Science ran a series of articles that showed that tokamaks would be so much large than fission reactors and so much more expensive (10x) that they would have no possible commercial or even military use.
Until global warming, tokamaks were the biggest scientific/criminal fraud ever committed by scientists.