Slashdot Mirror


College Freshman Builds Fusion Reactor

Aiua writes "The Deseret Morning News is reporting that a Utah State University freshman has built a nuclear fusion reactor and compares how the student is similar to Philo T. Farnsworth (the inventor of the television and designer of the plans for a fusion reactor)."

22 of 680 comments (clear)

  1. Cool you say? by Stigmata669 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Check out Fusor.net.

    --
    Yawn.
  2. Re:Farnsworth? by UWC · · Score: 5, Informative

    In a way. In one of the episode commentary tracks on the Futurama Season 1 DVD set, it's revealed that Philo was the good professor's namesake.

  3. Cool, But No Breeder Reactor by Myriad · · Score: 5, Informative
    Very cool... but not as cool as the breeder reactor this Boy Scout was cooking up.

    Good way to win a Darward Award while still living if you ask me...

    Blockwars: free, multiplayer, and with new features!

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    1. Re:Cool, But No Breeder Reactor by Pathwalker · · Score: 4, Informative

      Dave's still alive and well - I talked to him a couple of weeks ago.

      There's a good documentary about him that was made earlier this year.

      You can get some info on it here.

  4. [sigh] Slight false alarm by GileadGreene · · Score: 5, Informative
    Not that it isn't cool that a college freshman managed to build this, but this isn't exactly the big news it sounds like. What Wallace built is essentially an Inertial Electrostatic Confinement (IEC) fusion reactor. IECs use the electrostatic field generated by charged concentric spheres to confine the fusing plasma - you can think of it as a mini-sun that uses electrostatic fields instead of gravitational fields. IECs have been around for a good long while (since the days of Philo Farnsworth, as the article mentions).

    Unfortunately, Wallace's IEC, like every other IEC ever built, doesn't get even close to break-even. Their primary utility is, as the article mentions, as a neutron source (and in fact that's what they're usually used for). There are some folks that are hopeful they can find a way to improve the efficiency of IEC fusion and exceed break-even (Robert Bussard, of Bussard ram-jet fame, for example), but no one's managed to actually demonstrate a working, energy-generating IEC yet.

    1. Re:[sigh] Slight false alarm by GileadGreene · · Score: 4, Informative
      Actually, the bulk of the losses result from ions (or electrons) running into the inner electrode, which is a grid. The IEC consists of two concentric spheres, with a charge across them. The resulting electrostatic field accelerates ions or electrons (depending on the direction of the field) towards the center of the spheres, where fusion occurs. So ideally you want no grid at all, because you want the ions or electrons to zip through the inner electrode and directly to the center.

      That was Bussard's big breakthrough - he developed a way to use magnetic fields to protect the inner electrode from electron impacts, and thus increase the efficiency. Unfortunately, as far as I know, he never got the money to take it much beyond the concept demonstration stage (not as far as break-even). See "The World's Simplest Fusion Reactor: And How to Make It Work" for more details.

  5. Farnsworth and TV by sbszine · · Score: 4, Informative

    Philo T. Farnsworth (the inventor of the television... )

    The inventor of television is not necessarily Farnsworth -- there are several scientists with good claims on the title (including John Logie Baird, after whom the Logie television awards are named).

    --

    Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling

    1. Re:Farnsworth and TV by Animats · · Score: 5, Informative
      Here's the real story:

      Farnsworth invented the Farnsworth Image Dissector, the first TV camera tube. Which sucked. The device required huge amounts of light to work, bright sunlight, and big optics. It required so much light because it didn't integrate over the entire frame time; only the light that came in during the scan of the specific pixel contributed to the output. But it had some light amplification; it works a lot like a photomultiplier. In fact, it's basically a photomultiplier whose viewpoint can be steered.

      Shortly thereafter, Zworklin invented the iconoscope. Which also sucked. That device required huge amounts of light, but for a different reason. The iconoscope has no light amplification, but it integrates the accumulated light over a frame time on a per-pixel basis as an electric charge. The accumulated charge is then read out by a scanning beam.

      After much litigation, RCA ended up owning both technologies, and RCA Labs spent many years developing the image orthicon, which combines the good features of the two technologies. The image orthicon is just what you'd expect from a big corporate lab. It took years to develop, it's incredibly complicated and expensive, requires a huge amount of support electronics, is difficult to adjust, and produces a good picture at reasonable light levels. It has the photomultiplier-type amplification of the image dissector and the charge accumulation of the iconosope. Only after the image orthicon was developed did TV broadcasting become commercially viable.

  6. Re:Title is misleading by The+Original+Atrox · · Score: 5, Informative

    But if -you- RTFA, you would note, he -did- actually acheive fusion in the thing. Albeit, only a few molecules a minute, way to low to ever be used as a power source, but the device -did- fuse Deuterium ions. Which does have the side effect of generating the neutron radiation, which is negligable, as the article mentiones, no more than airline passengers are exposed to (being up there with a little less atmospheric cover).

    Atrox

    --
    -Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master.
  7. Re:This guy will be rich by Frymaster · · Score: 5, Informative
    Oh, cold fusion. Nothing to see here

    maybe because you refuse to look? yes, cold fusion got a bad rap and may very well be a crock of... non-fusing stuff. but there are smart people who disagree:

    • "There's very strong evidence that low-energy nuclear reactions do occur. Numerous experiments have shown definitive results" -George Miley, who received the Edward Teller medal for innovative research in hot fusion and has edited Fusion Technology magazine for the American Nuclear Society

    • "Nuclear reactions can occur without high temperatures. Low-energy nuclear transformations can - and do - exist." - John Bockris, formerly a distinguished professor in physical chemistry at Texas A&M University and a cofounder of the International Society for Electrochemistry

    • "I am absolutely certain there is unexplained heat, and the most likely explanation is that its origin is nuclear." - Michael McKubre, director of the Energy Research Center at SRI International

    quotes cribbed (using Copy-n-Paste[TM]) from the wired magazine article on cold fusion

    give it a read.

  8. Re:Um.... by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 4, Informative

    As impressive as this is, it isn't fusion. Don't you guys read these articles?

    "The ball is, literally, a small sun, where an electric field forces deuteron ions (a form of hydrogen) to gather, bang together and occasionally fuse, spitting out a neutron each time fusion occurs."

    Yes.

  9. Re:Second Place? by pr0ntab · · Score: 5, Informative


    Scroll about 2/3rds down the page or search for "Spanish".

    He came in second in his category (Physics). He was beat by about 40-some-odd other students altogether, and tied with a hundred or so.

    What beat him?
    Phase transition in chaotic fluids,
    Identifying genes with neural networks,
    Investigation into geothermal activity on Venus
    Silencing cancer with RNA
    Novel asteroid distance determination technique
    Capstone: Brain-computer interface for the disabled.

    He may have not gotten as high marks because he wasn't really discovering anything new or pursuing a topic from a strange angle... it was a humoungous task of engineering, however, and this could not be overlooked.

    --
    Fuck Beta. Fuck Dice
  10. Re:Required materials by rgmoore · · Score: 5, Informative

    It actually is pretty hard to make an implosion-type bomb work. They didn't work out the designs using slide rules, but actually cobbled together what was a hell of a lot of computing power for the day. I don't remember if they actually built any general-purpose electronic computers, but at least some of the work was done by large teams of workers using single purpose calculating machines. One machine would could add, another multiply, etc. and the system was "programmed" by coming up with a specific order in which IBM cards containing the information being processed were run through the system. Richard Feynman discussed a lot about this system in "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!". Admittedly the average mobile phone these days probably had enough processing power to do those calculations, but the Nobel Prize winning minds in charge of the project had a lot more to do with its success than the raw processing power.

    FWIW, you can learn far more than you ever wanted to know about nuclear weapons by reading the Nuclear Weapons Archive. When you understand everything in there, you can start thinking about building bombs.

    --

    There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

  11. Re:Um.... by einTier · · Score: 5, Informative

    I remembered this, so I went looking for it. Amazing what you can pull up on google. The shed did not glow. He did however, make a makeshift breeder reactor and enough radioactive material to be detected from five houses down.

    The tale of the radioactive boyscout

    --
    -------------------------------------------------- $665.95 -- retail price of the beast.
  12. Re:Um.... by Eric+Smith · · Score: 4, Informative
    Anonymous Coward wrote:
    if you RTFA you'll see that it isn't actually a fusion reactor or reaction at all.
    If you RTFA you'll see that it emits four neutrons per minute above the background level. If you're claiming that those four neutrons aren't the result of fusion, pray tell where they are in fact coming from?
  13. Generating neutrons is easy by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Informative

    You don't even need electricity for that. Just mix beryllium with a good source of alpha particles like radium. Beryllium 9 undergoes an (alpha,n) fusion reaction with an incident alpha particle, generating carbon 12 and a loose neutron.

    Beryllium 9 is great because it's essentially two helium nuclei held together by a loose neutron with a very low binding energy (1.66 MeV). It's almost the nuclear equivalent of an alkali metal. You can even pop the thing apart with a gamma ray if you don't want to bother with alpha emitters. For those who worry about berylliosis, boron 11 also works. The (alpha,n) reaction yields nitrogen 14.

    This was the setup that Chadwick used for detecting the neutron in 1932. Back then neutrons were referred to as "beryllium radiation" (sort of like how electrons were first called "cathode rays") and were wrongly thought to be some sort of strongly penetrating photons. Chadwick surrounded his beryllium source with wax and measured the energies of the protons that got knocked out by elastic collisions. Wax is a great moderator because it's full of protons, and the neutron slams into a proton in the wax and loses all its energy like a billiard ball. The neutron that emerges from the wax is a slow neutron. Slow neutrons are generally much more useful than fast neutrons because they spend more time in your fissionable material, and there is no Coulomb barrier that they need to overcome so they react with nuclei very easily.

    I shouldn't say too much more or else I'll get myself placed on the Bush Administration's new list of 100,000 maniacs. But if you're building a fission bomb, these reactions are really handy because your implosion doesn't last very long and you need to get hold of lots of slow neutrons in a hurry. If you're building a nuclear reactor for power generation, you're under less of a tight schedule and can probably wait a millisecond or two for neutrons from cosmic rays or spontaneous fissions to get your pile going.

  14. Re:Um.... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 4, Informative
    RTFA you'll see that it isn't actually a fusion reactor or reaction at all

    If this guy truly built a Farnsworth fusor, then you're wrong - the fusor really is capable of creating nuclear fusion. People building these things have measured the neutrons to prove it.

    The heart of the machine is some kind of electrode which uses energy from the fusion reaction itself to reinforce the electric field which is used to trigger the reaction (I guess by picking up energy from the energetic alpha particles & electrons between blasted out in all directions at really high energy levels from inside the electrode). Unfortunately, the reaction is not sustainable - the same effect which can force the deuterium together strongly enough to create fusion also prevents any _new_ fuel from entering from the outside of the field, thus causing the collapse of the reaction once all the fuel is consumed.

    Farnsworth really was a genius at manipulating electric fields. It's too bad he died early, or he might've been able to figure out how to make his fusor practical.

  15. Inventor of TV???? by sbryant · · Score: 4, Informative

    I would not necessarily call Philo Taylor Farnsworth the inventor of TV. Electronic TV, yes, along with transmission of TV signals (demonstrated in 1927), but Baird was the first to demonstrate a working "television" - a mechanical device, demonstrated in 1925. Farnsworth's used a scanning technique, much different in design to Baird's.

    I think Baird was the first to get colour working (in WW2). There were many others too, such as Zworykin (invented similar things, parallel to Farnsworth), Du Mont (invented the CRT), and Nipkow (invented the scanning disk in 1884, the basis for mechanical TVs).

    More info here and here.

    -- Steve

  16. Re:Um.... by aXis100 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The heart of the machine is some kind of electrode which uses energy from the fusion reaction itself to reinforce the electric field which is used to trigger the reaction

    Nope. It's basically two electrodes - an outer and inner spherical or conical system. By applying a high voltage, electrons or positive ions are attracted towards the inner elecrode, where they get trapped, collide, or overshoot.

    In simplified terms, some of the ions flying through/near the centre can have enough energy to undergo nuclear fusion.

    As far as ive read, one of the big problem is the occasional collisions with the wires that form the electrodes. This wastes energy and causes decay. Future research involves "virtual" electrodes or magnetic sheilding.

  17. Re:Farnsworth? by ajs318 · · Score: 4, Informative

    BOllox - John Logie Baird invented television, though it relied on a mechanical contraption for projecting a picture. Philo Farnsworth invented the cathode ray tube, which managed to put a picture on a screen without the moving parts; but not until there was actually anything to display using one.

    Then someone had the idea of, instead of charging people for the privilege of watching TV and using the money raised to pay for high-quality programmes that would at once inform, educate and entertain, letting people watch telly for free but showing advertisements during the breaks between programmes, and using the advertising money to pay for programmes that ultimately would do little more than fill in the breaks between adverts. IMHO that was the disinvention of television.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  18. Re:Only Second Place?! by thepacketmaster · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can find the results at http://www.sciserv.org/isef/results/grnd2003.asp Wallace was one of several Second award winners. First award went to two projects: "Is Eating Blueberry Pie Bad for You?" and "Chaotic Fluids: An Examination of Phase Transitions in Taylor-Couette Flow"

    --

    --

    Luck is just skill you didn't know you had.

  19. Re:"Inventor of Television"? by ausoleil · · Score: 5, Informative

    Baird was the inventor of mechanical scanning television.

    Q: How many of those are in use today?

    A: About 1x10^e-120 (okay, so it's a guess)

    Philo Farnsworth invented the electronic scanning system that you watch today.

    Vladimir Zworykin, who is often cited as the "inventor" of television said after his 1930 visit to Farnsworth lab that "I wish I might have invented it."

    Of course, Zworkin was in the employ of David Sarnoff of RCA. (as an aside: if you think that Microsoft is an anti-competitive monopoly, you should check out "Radio" of the 1920s. They had a portfolio of literally hundreds of patents that effectively denied entry in the radio marketplace unless you went first to them and paid licensing fees. And if Radio did not like you or wanted to own you, no license and no business for you.)

    Anyways, Sarnoff wanted RCA to dominate television the same way that they dominated radio. RCA tried for many years to discredit Farnworth and his invention, instead saying that Zworkin had invented the iconoscope in 1923. This, history shows us, was clearly a lie. It is a lie as grand as Apple or Microsoft claiming the invention of the graphical user interface for computing. Or that Marconi invented radio. Neither is true.

    History does show that on September 27, 1927 Philo T. Farnsowrth demonstrated the first all-electronic television system.

    Farnsworth was a brilliant man, and should be given full credit for all that he did.

    For more info: http://www.farnovision.com/chronicles/tfc-who_inve nted_what.html