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Build a Nuclear Fusion Reactor at Home

FridayBob writes "For those of you tired of waiting around for someone else to achieve the holy grail of physics, now's your chance to beat 'em all to it. All you need is some basic engineering skills, this site and the inspiration necessary to make your very own 'fusor' produce more energy than it consumes. Hopefully, you'll have more luck than its inventor, Philo T. Farnsworth, who first built it in the 1950's after inventing the television some 30 years earlier. If you run into problems you'll be able to count on a enthusiastic support group, as the contraption seems to have developed a cult following over the past few years. Okay, so I'm skeptical that this approach will ever really work, but at the very least it sounds like a really cool science project!"

21 of 364 comments (clear)

  1. But,,, by unterderbrucke · · Score: 5, Informative

    There was a kid who tried building a reactor once for his Boy Scout merit badge, and he got arrested for it. Do you want to risk that?

  2. And get bombed by Bush? by corebreech · · Score: 5, Funny

    Pass.

  3. Mr. Fusion by DeadBugs · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally I can get a Mr. Fusion to power my Flux Capacitor.

    --
    http://www.kubuntu.org/
  4. Homer Qoute: by Shymon · · Score: 5, Funny

    " Lisa in this house we obey the law of thermodynamics!"

  5. Danger(TV) Danger(Fusion Reactor) by Johnso · · Score: 5, Funny

    Whether or not this ever works, TV will go down as Farnsworth's most detrimental contribution to humanity.

    --
    I'm a signature virus. Please copy me to your signature so I can replicate.
  6. From their newbie page by McCrapDeluxe · · Score: 5, Informative

    But the most compelling promise of fusion is in the fuel itself: fusion is produced from an isotope of hydrogen called deuterium, which exists in the Earth's oceans in sufficient abundance to supply the planet's energy needs for hundreds of millions of years - until long after the Sun itself has flamed out.
    The sun is supposed to burn out in 5 billion years, I believe.

    1. Re:From their newbie page by sjames · · Score: 5, Funny

      Surely, solar power will be very practical then.

  7. philo should have combined the two... by limber · · Score: 5, Funny

    because then he would have wound up with a

    NUCLEAR POWERED TELEVISION SET!!

    now that's a plasma screen worth looking at...

  8. Farnsworth? by ar1550 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd trust an inventor named Farnsworth just as much as I'd trust a physician named Zoidberg.

    --
    I once shot a man in Reno 'cause they cancelled Firefly.
    1. Re:Farnsworth? by Penguin · · Score: 4, Interesting
      According to IMDb Trivia for Futurama, the "Farnsworth"-character is actually named after Philo T. Farnsworth:
      Professor Farnsworth is named after the inventor Philo T. Farnsworth, one of the pioneers of television, whose invention was premiered at the 1939 New York World's Fair, along with the Futurama exhibit.
      --
      - Peter Brodersen; professional nerd
  9. Farnsworth? by Chicane-UK · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hehe... wonder if Hubert J Farnsworth is a relative of his :)

    The article would have been better if they started with 'Good news everyone...' ;)

    --
    "Hey! Unless this is a nude love-in, get the hell off my property!!"
  10. Finally! by 403Forbidden · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now we don't have to develop a static powered car, but can rather make a Mr Fusion to power the Flux Capacitor so we can go to the future where all of life's problems are already solved!

  11. Re:But... by freeweed · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Strange, we up here in Canada have nuclear reactors, and haven't been named as members of the 'axis of evil'. I can't speak definitively for Europe, but I heard a rumor that many of the countries over there are in a similar position.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  12. CO2 isn't dirty either by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 5, Informative
    but coal ash is. Currently, aside from the proton/boron-11 reaction (which yields 3 alpha particles) and deuterium-He3, I'm unaware of any fusion reaction which does not yield high-energy neutrons. The neutrons from deuterium-tritium fusion come out at 14.1 MeV, I don't recall the value for D-D fusion (which yields helium-3 and a neutron). High-energy neutrons create radioactive stuff by transmuting other nuclei.

    The current state of fusion energy is pretty bad (way below a self-sustaining reaction) but this could still be used as a neutron source to drive a sub-critical fusion-fission reactor. Anyone who opposes fission power because of the spent-fuel issue wouldn't find this to be an improvement. (I would, because high-energy neutrons would be useful for transmuting fission products themselves, extracting their remnant energy and transforming them into stable isotopes. But I'm a geek and a technophile.)

  13. Keep this quiet by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 4, Funny
    I have a pocket full of chemical reactors which can reach a temperature of thousands of degrees Fahrenheit within a half-second of initiation, and can be used to start many highly destructive reactions.

    But don't tell anyone I own a book of matches, okay?

  14. Re:Inventor of television? by rodgerd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Baird was the first to demonstrate a working TV broadcast.

  15. Re:Inventor of television? by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 5, Informative

    Zworykin or however its spelled stole his ideas from Farnsworth. Baird invented a mechanical TV system, which had very limited potential. Farnsworth invented electronic TV. He is the inventor of what everyone knows as TV, specifically he came up with the idea of scanning lines on a CRT to produce the image. The only practical way to have TV.

    --
    This space available.
  16. I've always thought the prelude line was funnier by kfg · · Score: 4, Funny

    "This perpetual motion machine Lisa built is broken. It just keeps going faster and faster."

    KFG

  17. Dobutful ... I read through the patent by Doctor+K · · Score: 5, Informative

    So I read through the patent and I've seen talks on electrostatic confinement fusion at plasma physics conferences (plasma physics is once again my day job).

    I'm quite doubtful. My objection can be explained by looking at Figure 2 of the Hirsch and Meeks patent linked to through the fusor.net site.

    You need accelerate the ions to high energy (or equivalently heat the ions to high temperatures) so that they will collide and fuse. If the energy is too low, electrostatic repulsion will prevent the nuclei from getting close enough to let the strong force do its work.

    So what is my objection with Figure 2?

    To confine a plasma with sufficient energy to have respectable amounts of fusion requires very high potentials (think many mega-volt DC potentials) to trap the ions if you are doing it electrostatically. If the potential barrier isn't high enough, the ions will escape the reactor without fusing---you dump all this energy into the ions and they just leave, taking your energy with them ...

    For an electrostatic confinement system, you would need confining potentials comparable to the height of the nuclear electrostatic repulsion barrier (for the ions to fuse, they need to have energies higher than the nuclear electrostatic repulsion barrier but below the reactor electrostatic confinement barrier).

    Figure 2 is the potential distribution for the reactor. The potentials are a couple _thousand_ times too small to have any chance of confining fusion capable ions. At no point in the patent was it explained (clearly ... legalese is not good science writing) why high energy ions would be trapped and fuse in such a modest potential well.

    Kevin

    P.S. Furthermore, a purely electrostatic confining potential is not allowed by Poisson's equation (the equation governing electrostatics), as is taught in any first year college physics class. The quick explanation is that Gauss's law implies the existance of a charge in the potential well. But if you are trying to make a trap to isolate a particle, that is exactly what you don't want in your well. For example, Penning traps use a combination of electrostatic confinement (confinement at the end-caps) and magnetic fields (radial confinement). However, I'll give them the benefit of the doubt as this appears to be relying on dynamic effects virtual cathode/anode effects. (Actually, much of the initial modeling of virtual cathodes was done by my thesis advisor in the 1960s.)

  18. Re:Safe? by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You should read "Brotherhood of the Bomb" and read how Ernest Lawrence worked with his cyclotrons at Berkly (SP?). They basicly set up shop in a wooden shack. They had no sheilding or anything for a long time. Pretty much anything sounds safer and more advanced than his early creations.

  19. Nah - Not Unless You Have Oil. by Shturmovik · · Score: 5, Funny

    Then you'd be in trouble.