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  • #61
    Well we definitely won't be granting the comedy reactor to Korea

    Ha! hha aaa
    haaa!








    aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa111qq

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    • #62
      i don't want it in korea either. if it goes, japan's as good a places as any. they have experience in those things.

      france
      B♭3

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      • #63
        Childbirth

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        • #64
          childbirth

          france
          B♭3

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          • #65

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            • #66
              One of the first responders to this thread called the initial article biased. In what way did you think it was biased?

              Azazel and Imran Siddiqui, fallout is not the result of radioactivity, it's the result of dust and material thrown into the air by a nuclear explosion. No explosion, no fallout, regardless of whether it's fission or fusion power.

              Azazel, petroleum will retain increasing value regardless of whatever other energy sources people can harness. It's an incredibly valuable and irreplaceable raw material. Everyone on earth could benefit from a source of cheap, clean power (I'm not suggesting that fusion offers that, though). Russia, with its fairly cold climate, would benefit more than most.

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              • #67
                My impression of the way a fusion reactor is supposed to work is that a tiny bead of hydrogen doped with deuterium and or tritium is introduced into a magnetic field and then is compressed. An array of 20+ lasers are fired at the compressed fuel. The heat of the lasers on the surface of the bead furhter compresses it and also heats it. Hopefully the combination of compression and heat reaches the threshold for fusion. The fused fuel produces alpha, beat and gamma radiation, which are absorbed in the wall of the reactor heating some sort of liquid medium, which then is piped into a turbine where electicity is generated. I think that fuel beads are fed into the reactor one at a time, not as a contigous stream. I don't know how often beads are supposed to be consumed. Is it one/minute, one/second, or one/microsecond? I'm not certain what is meant by a "continuous, sustained" operation. Maybe in the past experimental reactors have simply consumed one or two fuel beads/ experiment, then measured the yield. Maybe what is unique about this experiment is that they have figured out a way to produce a continuous supply of fuel beads.

                Fusion reactors are inherently safer than fission reactors because there is very little radioactive fuel, and the radiation producing reaction is very brief. I suppose it would still be possible for the heat absorbing liquid medium to explode, possibly destroying the plant, but there isn't a lot of resident radiation to be blown into the air. Some scientists have worried that the reactor mass itself might become radioactive over a matter of years due to the continuous bombardment of its metal parts by radiation.

                Even if they succeed, and are able to manufacture sufficient numbers of fusion reactors to satisfy the world's need for electircal energy, there will still be plenty of uses for petroleum. I doubt that reactors small enough to power cars and trucks would soon be possible.
                "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

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                • #68
                  Originally posted by debeest
                  One of the first responders to this thread called the initial article biased. In what way did you think it was biased?
                  In the way it specifically notes US reason for backdoor shenanigans - yet doesn't note the whole France, Russia, China thing under same terms. This would be BBC's stance upon Britain's automatic EU based support, regardless of what they might feign outside in "official" talks on the matter.

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                  • #69
                    I have no problem with it being in Japan.

                    What with Japanese troops in Iraq and no Frenchmen.

                    Seriously, Europe already has that huge Particle accelerator thingie in Switzerland, let Japan have the next big Physics experiment.
                    Today, you are the waves of the Pacific, pushing ever eastward. You are the sequoias rising from the Sierra Nevada, defiant and enduring.

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                    • #70
                      Originally posted by Q Cubed
                      i say bring it to asia.

                      asia is where the future lies, after all.
                      Maybe you don't remember the late 1980's where EVERYONE was saying Japan was the world's next super power and would surely rule the world.

                      The oracles were wrong then they might be now as well. China has been stumbling towards modernization for 200 years. It's doing well now but will it have the solid 50 years of growth it needs? We shall see.
                      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                      • #71
                        Seriously, Europe already has that huge Particle accelerator thingie in Switzerland, let Japan have the next big Physics experiment.
                        Japan can't even launch a probe to Mars! At least we can. Ha! So to avoid them screwing this up to, bring it to France.
                        Quod Me Nutrit Me Destruit

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                        • #72
                          Originally posted by Saint Marcus


                          Japan can't even launch a probe to Mars! At least we can. Ha! So to avoid them screwing this up to, bring it to France.
                          Don't Cackle until after the egg is laid. IIRC, Your Probe hasn't even touched down yet.
                          Today, you are the waves of the Pacific, pushing ever eastward. You are the sequoias rising from the Sierra Nevada, defiant and enduring.

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                          • #73
                            france

                            and asia is where the future lies. why? 'cause there's so many of us!
                            B♭3

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                            • #74
                              Fusion:
                              Big Coal:
                              Big Oil:

                              We would have fusion power by now if Big Coal and Big Oil would quit lobbying the government to not fund the research.

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                              • #75
                                One of the first responders to this thread called the initial article biased. In what way did you think it was biased?


                                Zylka summed my thoughts up perfectly...

                                In the way it specifically notes US reason for backdoor shenanigans - yet doesn't note the whole France, Russia, China thing under same terms. This would be BBC's stance upon Britain's automatic EU based support, regardless of what they might feign outside in "official" talks on the matter.


                                I particularly didn't like the fact that China's antipathy to all things Japanese didn't get mentioned.
                                KH FOR OWNER!
                                ASHER FOR CEO!!
                                GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

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