Can a Star in a Jar be the Ultimate Weapon?

In summary: PhysicistFirst - Fermi's experiment was a FISSION reactor - not a fusion reactor.Secondly - you have to understand how a fission reactor works. You wanta fission reactor to be exactly "critical" - that means [ contrary to theconventional implication ] that the production rate of neutrons in thereactor exactly equals the destruction rate. When production equals destruction; the reactor is at steady-state; and the power level is constant.In order to do that, you build the reactor with some excess reactivity - so that in the absence ofthe control rods the production would slightly exceed destruction. The presence ofthe control rods which absorb
  • #1
Spin_Network
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If this is probable:http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4270297.stm

then 'Stars in a Jar' would be the ultimate weapon, clean thorough and totally effective.

Lets say the evidence existed from the LAN 'newmexico' database, and this mysteriously vanished along with other relevant papers detailing experimental setup and such.

If the process becomes mainstream, and Fusion of this type can be created, the the 'Star' could be made to go Supernova?

Unlike the fission 'China-Syndrome' catastrophe, a Star that was created with the sole purpose to invoke a Supernova Explosive devise, could theoretically be used to Terrorise any civilization within at least 4 to 5 lightyears from the Product.

Is this feasable? can a 'Star_in_a_jar' be the Ultimate 'blackmail' weapon?
 
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  • #2
Spin_Network said:
If this is probable:http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4270297.stm

then 'Stars in a Jar' would be the ultimate weapon, clean thorough and totally effective.

Lets say the evidence existed from the LAN 'newmexico' database, and this mysteriously vanished along with other relevant papers detailing experimental setup and such.

If the process becomes mainstream, and Fusion of this type can be created, the the 'Star' could be made to go Supernova?

Unlike the fission 'China-Syndrome' catastrophe, a Star that was created with the sole purpose to invoke a Supernova Explosive devise, could theoretically be used to Terrorise any civilization within at least 4 to 5 lightyears from the Product.

Is this feasable? can a 'Star_in_a_jar' be the Ultimate 'blackmail' weapon?

Spin_Network,

Just because you have fusion, doesn't mean that you have the potential
for a supernova.

Our own Sun is undergoing nuclear fusion - but it will not go supernova -
it is too small. The Sun will end its life with a whimper, not with a bang.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
  • #3
Morbius said:
Spin_Network,

Just because you have fusion, doesn't mean that you have the potential
for a supernova.

Our own Sun is undergoing nuclear fusion - but it will not go supernova -
it is too small. The Sun will end its life with a whimper, not with a bang.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist

But why did they control rods (neutron absorbers) in the "college basement" prior to the Manhatten Project?..to produce the reaction or to prevent the reaction from a runaway?
 
  • #4
The Manhattan project had nothing to with fusion. It was (as most of you should know) set up to develop fission weapons. Fission reactor development (where neutron absorbers were needed for control) was an essential part of the research effort.
 
  • #5
Spin_Network said:
to produce the reaction or to prevent the reaction from a runaway?
...The latter - to prevent the fission reaction from running away. If the fission reaction had run away, the scientists would have been bombarded with neutrons. A runaway fission reaction is different from a supernova.
 
  • #6
hitssquad said:
...The latter - to prevent the fission reaction from running away. If the fission reaction had run away, the scientists would have been bombarded with neutrons. A runaway fission reaction is different from a supernova.

Which is exactly what I was stating, just like mathman said in previous post, I do know quite a bit about the MP and process involved, but I stated the obvious to run parallel to what I was going to state here:

The collapse of a Star(supernova) 'IS' a runaway Fusion process! whereas a Star in A Jar is a Controlled fusion reaction?...there would be inevitable consequences, if..and its a big if, certain factors were to occur.

Without obviouslly stating those factors!

Thanks for the input.
 
  • #7
Spin_Network said:
But why did they control rods (neutron absorbers) in the "college basement" prior to the Manhatten Project?..to produce the reaction or to prevent the reaction from a runaway?

Spin_Network,

First - Fermi's experiment was a FISSION reactor - not a fusion reactor.

Secondly - you have to understand how a fission reactor works. You want
a fission reactor to be exactly "critical" - that means [ contrary to the
conventional implication ] that the production rate of neutrons in the
reactor exactly equals the destruction rate. When production equals
destruction; the reactor is at steady-state; and the power level is constant.

In order to do that, you build the reactor with some excess reactivity -
so that in the absence of the control rods the production would slightly
exceed destruction. The presence of the control rods which absorb
neutrons then increases the destruction so that it matches production.

Unlike a car, where you can step on the throttle and add more fuel to
make the car go faster - in a nuclear reactor, you add an absorber to
damp the reaction.

Contrary to popular misconception - a reactor won't "runaway" if the
control rods are pulled out. There are numerous other feedbacks that
come into effect. In the case of Fermi's reactor; as the graphite
moderator of the reactor heats up, it becomes less dense, and therefore
moderates neutrons less.

Fermi's reactor also used natural [ unenriched ] uranium which is 99.3%
non-fissile U-238. This would also lead to substantial negative feedback
mechanism due to Doppler broadening of absorption resonances in the
U-238.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #8
Spin_Network said:
Which is exactly what I was stating, just like mathman said in previous post, I do know quite a bit about the MP and process involved, but I stated the obvious to run parallel to what I was going to state here:

The collapse of a Star(supernova) 'IS' a runaway Fusion process! whereas a Star in A Jar is a Controlled fusion reaction?...there would be inevitable consequences, if..and its a big if, certain factors were to occur.

Without obviouslly stating those factors!

Spin_Network,

It's NOT "if" - not even a "big if" - it just plain won't happen!

You state "without obviously stating those factors" - why not state
the factors - if you know them.

If you won't state the factors - I will - you need a mass of plasma that
is several times the mass of the Sun in order for the star to go
supernova. The supernova is the result of an implosion of the star - an
implosion that is driven by gravity. The massive gravitational force
of the Sun is not sufficient to drive this implosion - which is why the
Sun will not turn into a supernova.

Contrary to your implication above - there's no harm in stating the
conditions for a supernova - a mass several times that of the Sun -
because there's no way we can achieve that here on Earth - Hell, the
Sun, which is a million times more massive than the Earth, can't do it.

Why don't you educate yourself on the physics of a supernova, courtesy
of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center:

http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/science/know_l2/supernovae.html

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
  • #9
Spin_Network said:
The collapse of a Star(supernova) 'IS' a runaway Fusion process! .

Only in the case of the rare Type 1a supernova is there a runaway fusion
reaction. [ You need a binary star system for a Type 1a. ]

The usual Type II supernova is NOT a runaway fusion process - it a
runaway GRAVITY process!

You get the Type II supernova when the fusion reactions have STOPPED.

You can only get energy from fusion if you are below Iron on the periodic
table. Iron is the most stable element. If you can fuse elements lighter
than Iron; or fission elements heavier than Iron - you release energy.

Iron is the ultimate nuclear "ash".

When a star has burned all its fuel to Iron - the fusion reactions stop.
Without the heat produced by fusion, the star can not resist its own
gravity which collapses the star.

The most common Type II supernovae are NOT caused by fusion, - they
are caused by GRAVITY!

Look under the heading, "What Causes of Star to Blow Up", in the web
page from Goddard to find, "Gravity gives the supernova its energy."

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #10
Morbius said:
Only in the case of the rare Type 1a supernova is there a runaway fusion
reaction. [ You need a binary star system for a Type 1a. ]


The usual Type II supernova is NOT a runaway fusion process - it a
runaway GRAVITY process!

You get the Type II supernova when the fusion reactions have STOPPED.

You can only get energy from fusion if you are below Iron on the periodic
table. Iron is the most stable element. If you can fuse elements lighter
than Iron; or fission elements heavier than Iron - you release energy.

Iron is the ultimate nuclear "ash".

When a star has burned all its fuel to Iron - the fusion reactions stop.
Without the heat produced by fusion, the star can not resist its own
gravity which collapses the star.

The most common Type II supernovae are NOT caused by fusion, - they
are caused by GRAVITY!

Look under the heading, "What Causes of Star to Blow Up", in the web
page from Goddard to find, "Gravity gives the supernova its energy."

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist

Below is some extracts from:http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Nwfaq/Nfaq4-3.html
There are NEW ways of dealing with certain fusion 'imploding' yeilds:
4.4.5 Fusion Stage Nuclear Physics and Design

4.4.5.1 Fusionable Isotopes

The important thermonuclear reactions for weapons are given below:
1. D + T -> He-4 + n + 17.588 MeV (n kinetic energy is 14.070 MeV)
2. D + D -> He-3 + n + 3.2689 MeV (n kinetic energy is 2.4497 MeV)
3. D + D -> T + p + 4.0327 MeV
4. He-3 + D -> He-4 + p + 18.353 MeV


The first fuel ever considered for a thermonuclear weapon was pure deuterium (reactions 2 and 3, which are equally likely). This is primarily because deuterium is a relatively easy fuel to burn (compared to most other candidates), is comparatively abundant in nature, and is cheap to produce. In fact, no other fuel has this same combination of desirable properties.

Only one other fusion fuel is easier to ignite - a mixture of deuterium and tritium (reaction 1). At moderate thermonuclear temperatures, the T-D reaction is 100 times faster than D-D combustion. Unfortunately, tritium does not occur in nature in useful amounts, and is very costly to manufacture.

end of extract.


current understanding of Parametric Downconversion, with high yeild Bose Einstien Condensate's, points to a Quark-Gluon type Repulsive Reactant device, as being real in the very near future.

I have done some back of the 'Born' envelope calculations, and I see the prospect of a 'cosmic-devise', which is not like the Fission Reactions you clearly point to?

Lets give an example, its well known that BEC collapse, produces particle jets, the particle yield is amplified according to the 'size' of the BEC. Now if we use the analogy of the Campus Core/pile used in the Manhatten Project, the 'atomic pile' is similar to the single BEC?

I have to disappear for a awhile...

Ok..lets continue, the NASA site for some simplistic overview:http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/science/know_l2/supernovae.html
clearly states:What Causes a Star to Blow Up?
Gravity gives the supernova its energy. For Type II supernovae, mass flows into the core by the continued making of iron from nuclear fusion. Once the core has gained so much mass that it cannot withstand its own weight, the core implodes. This implosion can usually be brought to a halt by neutrons, the only things in nature that can stop such a gravitational collapse. Even neutrons sometimes fail depending on the mass of the star's core. When the collapse is abruptly stopped by the neutrons, matter bounces off the hard iron core, thus turning the implosion into an explosion: ka-BOOM!
For Type Ia supernova, the energy comes from the run-away fusion of carbon and oxygen in the core of the white dwarf.

butt..according to R LAUGHLIN:http://large.stanford.edu/rbl/articles/p01sep00.htm

the gravity according to 'nasa' can be mimicked by :http://edu.ioffe.ru/register/?doc=galperin/l14pdf4.tex

in fact one reason that Quantum Gravity is puzzling, is because the Gravitational Effects are replaced by Electro-Magnetic 'field' effects down on quantum scales, the strong-force IS gravitational in quantum 2-d scenarios.

Thus, if one creates a 'metallic-like-pile':http://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0305697

one can use this to implode in a repulsive action, reproducing(actually increasing the strong-coupling-force, to instigate a 'runway' implosion, with the emmision products being scattered from the edge, a "Bose-nova"...mimicking a Supernova..??

Question:Are Stars Liquids..Solids..Gas or Plasma?
 
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  • #11
Man-made supernovas

Spin Network:


Most of your above-reply to Morbius was web-plagiarized and/or garbled. You seemed to imply before that you thought that a supernova could be created by human-created nuclear devices on Earth. Morbius seems to have responded to that by explaining why he doesn't think a man-made supernova - at least in the near term - is plausible.

Were you trying to say in your post above that you still think that man-made supernovas via near-term technology are plausible?
 
  • #12
Stars contain massive amounts (1E33-1E36 g) of hydrogen, helium and other light elements, with traces of heavier elements, in the form of plasma. Older stars may have much more in the way of heavier elements.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bose-Einstein_condensate
Widipedia said:
A Bose-Einstein condensate is a gaseous superfluid phase formed by atoms cooled to temperatures very near to absolute zero. The first such condensate was produced by Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman in 1995, using a gas of rubidium atoms cooled to 170 nanokelvins (nK). Under such conditions, a large fraction of the atoms collapse into the lowest quantum state, producing a superfluid.

The cited paper by R.B.Laughlin,"The Quantum Criticality Conundrum", has to do with materials near absolute zero and particularly correlated-electron materials like yttrium-barium-cuprate (YBCO) superconductors.

http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/releases/tn6240.htm
NIST said:
The condensate first shrinks as expected, but rather than gradually clumping together in a mass, there is instead a sudden explosion of atoms outward. This "explosion," which actually corresponds to a tiny amount of energy by normal standards, continues for a few thousandths of a second. Left behind is a small cold remnant condensate surrounded by the expanding gas of the explosion.

Since the phenomenon looks very much like a tiny supernova, or exploding star, Wieman's team dubbed it a "Bosenova." The most surprising thing about the Bosenova is that the fundamental physical process behind the explosion is still a mystery.
It is unfortunate that the NIST people used an analogy with a pocket-sized supernova. The BEC phenomenon has nothing to do with a star going supernova - the energy densities are orders of magnitude different - much the same a the detonation of 1 kg of TNT is 9 orders of magnitude less energy than a 1 MT thermonuclear warhead. Even a 100 MT thermonuclear warhead does not a supernova make. The only similarity between a chemical explosion and a nuclear explosion is that the energy transforms a solid into a gas 'very quickly' with a concommitant rapid change in volume - that basically explains the term 'explosion'.
 
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  • #13
Spin_Network said:
butt..according to R LAUGHLIN:http://large.stanford.edu/rbl/articles/p01sep00.htm

the gravity according to 'nasa' can be mimicked by :http://edu.ioffe.ru/register/?doc=galperin/l14pdf4.tex

in fact one reason that Quantum Gravity is puzzling, is because the Gravitational Effects are replaced by Electro-Magnetic 'field' effects down on quantum scales, the strong-force IS gravitational in quantum 2-d scenarios.

Spin_Network,

All you've succeeded in doing is to show that you don't understand
supernovae, nor BEC, nor the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect, nor
Quantum Gravity...

You've just put together a bunch of unrelated "mumbo-jumbo".

I'm at a lost as to how to respond to this potpourri of illogic nonsense.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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1. What is fusion energy?

Fusion energy is a type of nuclear energy that is generated by fusing together two atomic nuclei to form a heavier nucleus. This process releases a large amount of energy, which can be harnessed to generate electricity.

2. How is fusion energy different from other sources of energy?

Fusion energy is different from other sources of energy, such as fossil fuels, in several ways. Fusion does not emit greenhouse gases or produce radioactive waste, making it a clean and sustainable energy source. It also has virtually unlimited fuel supply, as it relies on hydrogen isotopes found in seawater.

3. What are the potential benefits of a fusion future?

A fusion future has the potential to provide a reliable and nearly limitless source of clean energy, reducing our dependence on fossil fuels. It could also help reduce carbon emissions and mitigate the effects of climate change. Additionally, fusion reactors have the potential to be safer and more efficient than current nuclear reactors.

4. What are the challenges in achieving a fusion future?

One of the main challenges in achieving a fusion future is creating and sustaining the extreme temperatures and pressures required for fusion reactions to occur. Scientists are also working on finding suitable materials to contain and control the plasma, as well as developing efficient energy conversion methods.

5. When can we expect to see fusion energy being used commercially?

While there have been significant advancements in fusion research, it is difficult to predict an exact timeline for commercial use of fusion energy. Some experts estimate that it may take several more decades to develop and test a commercially viable fusion reactor, but with continued research and investment, it is possible to see fusion energy being used in the near future.

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