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National Ignition Facility Fires 192-Beam Pulse

An anonymous reader writes "The construction and test firing of the National Ignition Facility have been completed. NIF was designed as the first facility ever to achieve self-sustaining nuclear fusion and, in particular, to reach the point of ignition in which more energy is generated from the reaction than went into creating it. While the recent 192-beam pulse only produced 80 kilojoules worth of energy, all signs point to NIF being able to reach an order of magnitude higher (PDF) than that in the coming year."

16 of 438 comments (clear)

  1. hmmm by Idiomatick · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hasn't the worlds largest laser always been completed? Or at least since the first laser was created..

  2. Sorry, can't get worked up over it by jmorris42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We have been about thirty years away from having fusion power for the last forty or so years. Seems like they pick thirty years because it is far enough out that those making the predictions probably won't be around to be held to account.

    And the NIF webpage says nothing about trying to actually achieve a stable fusion reaction, just general high energy research stuff with some carrots dangled out to keep the funding going. So we are still probably thirty years away from fusion plants.

    If we were really serious about energy independence (or if ya still believe in AGW) we would be building fission plants as fast as we could pour concrete and dumping serious coin into R&D on fusion. The idea being fission is what we can do NOW but be sure we have something in the pipeline lest we, in a hundred years or so, find ourselves running out of Uranium and back in the same energy crisis and by then demand would be so great burning dinosaurs would be pissin' in the wind.

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    Democrat delenda est
  3. Re:Energy Independence by fishinatree · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think we've moved past the old Cold War era modus operandi: nuclear weapons are no longer necessary nor considered as an indicator of power. Military spending in that area has decreased drastically since the Reagan era. Essentially, we've reached a point where "kick[ing] each others ass as best as we can afford" is no longer a profitable venture and is, in fact, a great way to lose the economic support and favor of the international community. What we need is some CERN-scale collaboration on this so that we can possibly help to alleviate the energy strains on the global populace.

  4. Re:indeed by digitalunity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're right, we should just give up now. Obviously the fact that it's not ready for commercialization now is indicative of it's future potential as a technology.

    Excuse me while I go reload my coal plant.

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    You can't legislate goodness. Let each to his own destiny, by will of his freely made choices.
  5. Re:Energy Independence by 14erCleaner · · Score: 5, Insightful

    what I keep hearing from people in the field of nuclear physics is that Fusion will be realized by the mid 2020s.

    Commercial fusion reactors have been 20 years away for at least the last 40 years. It's good to hear that we're now only 15 years away.

    --
    Have you read my blog lately?
  6. Re:Energy Independence by jmorris42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > When we have energy in surplus, at the (general) expense of no one, the world
    > may move much more easily to peaceful respect and cooperation.

    ROFLMAO! Energy abundance will more likely just shift the resource wars to different places. We won't need oil any more but we will need all sorts of rare minerals just like we do now, only with limitless energy we will develop all sorts of new exotic manufacturing processes. But telling the House of Saud to go pound sand will still be priceless.

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    Democrat delenda est
  7. close but not quite by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a society is as rich as its values. this is the reason the west is so powerful, not because it has nike sweatshops in indonesia. the usa, in 250 years, has eclipsed civilizations thousands of years older, because its foundational values from the enlightenment are simply superior ways of organizing society in productivity and happiness, and valuing progress and tolerance

    however, in its need for energy, the west rewards places like saudi arabia. therefore, saudi arabia has no incentive to get better values, or evolve, and remains a stultified insanity exporting (wahabbi islam) country. when soccer mom fills up her SUV, she funds ultraconservative madrassas in pakistan and indonesia via saudi arabia that teach the west is the devil and should be destroyed

    if oil never existed on the arabian penninsula, the insane ultraconservative religious ideas would remain the enclave of the few tribes who remained in the desert, and the cities would be full of young progressive thinking muslims, modern-looking and clamoring for change, and achieving it. simply because there would be no artificially propped up old guard preserving medieval values that simply don't work, and keeping their young from having a society they can envision themselves as better than the one they have

    oil money, petrodollars, it keeps saudi arabia frozen in time, without any need or desire to adapt better values, and it allows it to export social values which are toxic to progress and prosperity. it exports these backwards values, and funds the evangelizing of ultraconservative wahabbi islam throughout the muslim world. so when we have fusion, and the value of oil drops to squat, only then will saudi arabia begin to modernize, because only then will it have to modernize for the first time since the penninsula was united in the early 20th century and oil was discovered

    but right now, saudi arabia doesn't have to modernize its value system, because it is rewarded insane amounts of cash simply for sitting on a lot of oil. to the detriment of saudi society, the detriment of poor muslim societies that are recipients of the evangelizing of well-funded ultraconservative thinking, and the detriment of the west, which is vilified by the people it pays to give them oil to run their gas guzzling cars

    in this way will fusion promote peace: by stop rewarding feeble, backwards societies and their unhuman values, simply because they sit on a lot of oil

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  8. Re:Inertial confinement vs. magnetic confinement by Sgs-Cruz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Go to the NIF site. What are the first things you see?

    NATIONAL IGNITION FACILITY AND PHOTON SCIENCE: THE POWER OF LIGHT

    Schwarzenegger touts NIF energy innovations

    Creating a miniature star on Earth: that's the goal of the National Ignition Facility (NIF), the world's largest laser. When ignition experiments begin in 2010, NIF will focus the intense energy of 192 giant laser beams on a BB-sized target filled with hydrogen fuel â" fusing, or igniting, the hydrogen atoms' nuclei. This is the same fusion energy process that makes the stars shine and provides the life-giving energy of the sun.

    Missions:

    National Security

    Energy for the Future.

    You can't tell me that there isn't a very deliberate marketing plan being put into action here.

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    Karma: pi (Mostly due to circular reasoning in posts).

  9. how is that racist? by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    i have muslim friends. i have nothing against islam. there's a mosque down the street. doesn't bother me at all. i am a very tolerant person

    what i don't tolerate is: intolerance. get it?

    your problem is you are confusing my criticism of ultraconservative islam, with criticism of just plain islam. i am criticizing the ultraconservative, not islam

    we are talking about a society where christians and hindus can't practice their religion: all the rough jobs in saudi arabia are done by indian and filipino laborers, because saudi men won't do jobs "beneath them". don't you consider freedom of religion a basic human right? and women: in saudi arabia, a woman's rights are about as good as the rights of a head of cattle

    this is horrible intolerance. and its the law of saudi arabia

    i can't criticize that without being a racist in your mind? really?

    since when does tolerance mean you tolerate the intolerant?

    since when are you a racist simply because you criticize another culture? i can't criticize saudi arabia at all? and if i do, that means i must be a racist? you really believe that?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  10. Re:Energy Independence by DigiShaman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What we need is some CERN-scale collaboration on this so that we can possibly help to alleviate the energy strains on the global populace.

    That's great and all, but not very helpful when you have religious radical factions tearing nations apart from the inside out.

    What governs humanity's motivation often goes beyond just the quest of plentiful resources.

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    Life is not for the lazy.
  11. Re:indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're a fucking idiot. The time from the earliest nuclear experiments and commercial nuclear plants was almost a century. The time between finding out that black liquid from the ground burns and oil refineries was a thousand years. The time between fire and steam power was longer than all of recorded history.

    The time it takes an idiot to turn a random brain firing into an unthought out Slashdot posting, however, is obviously much, much shorter.

  12. Re:Energy Independence by kestasjk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But a nuclear fission plant had an accident 20 years ago.. Sorry but we'll just have to wait for fusion and use coal in the meantime.

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    // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
  13. Re:Energy Independence by MadnessASAP · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Also, don't expect energy to stay cheap. Fossil fuels are obviously finite.

    Did you skip the Article AND Summary? Well let me remidn you, this discussion is about the implications of Fusion power. Dwell on that one of a while my freind.

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    I may agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to face the consequences of saying it.
  14. Re:indeed by mbkennel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nuclear experiments in 1855? Surely you joke. Nobody in 1855 knew what a nucleus was, or was even convinced about the atomic theory of matter.

    In fact, nuclear fission was discovered in 1938, and large scale full production systems were operating by 1945 (Hanford), with commercial utility turn-on by mid 1950's.

    Nuclear fusion was discovered in early 30's, I think, before fission.

    The reason why nuclear fission went from discovery to exploitation immediately, and fusion is still really hard, is due to the laws of physics.

    Specifically:

    1) neutrons have charge zero, but nuclei don't.
    2) strong force is very short range

    These will never change.

    And yes, the original poster is right, NIF isn't helping much for energy production.

  15. Re:Energy Independence by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess you don't read the literature. Tokamak "advanced modes" are practically a breakthrough and thats from the actual data not simulations. ITER will produce sustained fusion burn. DEMO will go one step further. At the cost of 20 billion for 5+ year program its not bad since a plain old fashion nuclear reactor can cost upwards of 10 billion. In fact if they got the budget of say federal roading (about 40Billion per year) it would have been done by now.

    I find it amusing that you assume that we are still in the 60s with plasma and fusion technology without reading up on any of it first.

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    The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  16. Re:Energy Independence by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you have effectively free and infinite energy, practically any other resource problem can be solved with today's technology.

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