bill nye scienceguy!
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just curious.
Astronuc,Astronuc said:In inertial confinement, small pellets of frozen (DT) are dropped into a chamber and then blasted with lasers or electron beams. Lasers are preferred since they avoid using charges which are deflected by magnetic and electric fields. The main problems are the cryogenic storage, large power systems for lasers (or e-beams), reliably hitting the target, and then conversion of the thermonuclear energy into useful power.
Astronuc said:There are two methods proposed for fusion - inertial confinement and magnetic confinement.
In inertial confinement, small pellets of frozen (DT) are dropped into a chamber and then blasted with lasers or electron beams. Lasers are preferred since they avoid using charges which are deflected by magnetic and electric fields. The main problems are the cryogenic storage, large power systems for lasers (or e-beams), reliably hitting the target, and then conversion of the thermonuclear energy into useful power.
vanesch,vanesch said:It was my (naive?) understanding that inertial confinement was not really a technique to commercially generate energy, but rather to study thermonuclear reactions and extreme matter states ? In other words, make tiny hydrogen bombs and study them in the lab. Is there a serious attempt, through this channel, to progress towards commercial power generation (in the style of ITER and its possible successor) ?
My question is an ignorant repetition of what my former professor of plasma physics told the class, now about 20 years ago.
As Morbius indicated, ICF is considered as a possibility for producing electrical power. However, like magnetic confinement, there are some high technical hurdles to overcome.vanesch said:It was my (naive?) understanding that inertial confinement was not really a technique to commercially generate energy, but rather to study thermonuclear reactions and extreme matter states ? In other words, make tiny hydrogen bombs and study them in the lab. Is there a serious attempt, through this channel, to progress towards commercial power generation (in the style of ITER and its possible successor)?
My question is an ignorant repetition of what my former professor of plasma physics told the class, now about 20 years ago.