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sid_galt
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Why can't fusion be accomplished using high energy density electric fields?
sid_galt said:But the laser fields vary sinusoidically with time. I am talking about a static field which sort of pushes +ions together. What are the practical difficulties in generating those high energy density fields?
In order to overcome the coulomb force between two protons you would need an electro static force greater than:sid_galt said:Why can't fusion be accomplished using high energy density electric fields?
RoboSapien said:Are static electric forces stronger that magnetic ?
Thanks for the enlightenment sir. Thats going to help us very much in the future.Morbius said:... What led me more or less directly to the special theory of
relativity was the conviction that the electromotive force acting on a
body moving in a magnetic field was nothing else than an electric field."
-Albert Einstein
...
Is there any other way in which fusion can be achived ? ( except cold fusion )Emfuser said:...
RoboSapien said:Is there any other way in which fusion can be achived ? ( except cold fusion )
ZapperZ said:
RoboSapien said:Is there any other way in which fusion can be achived ? ( except cold fusion )
RoboSapien said:Is there any other way in which fusion can be achived ? ( except cold fusion )
Emfuser said:Fusion CAN be achieved with magnetic confinement, it's just not as easy as one might think when considering the initial ideas. The problems with magnetic confinement right now come down to what I said before: money and materials needed for a proper scale reactor.
Morbius said:Emfuser,
I don't think we can say that "Fusion CAN be achieved with magnetic
confinement.." quite yet. We do not as yet have a proof of principle for
fusion ignition via magnetic confinement.
As we have built larger and larger machines - like the family of tokamaks
at the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab; PLT [ Princeton Large Torus ] and
TFTR [ Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor ]; to name the latest two in the
series - we've seen more and more varied plasma instabilities that have
circumvented our quest for magnetic fusion.
Hopefully, the latest machine - the ITER - will be more successful.
The progress in inertial fusion has been more sustained. Inertial fusion
ignition has been accomplished in the aforemention hydrogen bombs -
but also the progress has been more sustained in the laser fusion arena.
The main problem facing laser fusion was to be able to drive a target
that was big enough - so that it could capture the product alpha particles
and achieve ignition. Calculations indicate that the new LLNL laser -
the NIF [ National Ignition Facility ] will be large enough and powerful
enough to achieve ignition [ hence the name ].
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
Emfuser said:Sure you can achieve fusion within current magnetic confinement devices. Whether or not you can achieve breakeven with any current device is a different story. ITER is (and forever will be, at this pace) slated to be the first magnetic confinement device to do that.
sid_galt said:Why can't fusion be accomplished using high energy density electric fields?
Electric fusion is a process that involves using high energy density electric fields to fuse together two atomic nuclei, resulting in the release of energy. This is similar to traditional nuclear fusion, but it utilizes electric fields instead of heat or pressure to initiate the fusion reaction.
Electric fusion has the potential to be used as a source of clean, renewable energy. It could also be used in medical imaging and cancer treatment, as well as in space propulsion systems.
Currently, electric fusion has not been successfully sustained for long periods of time. However, research is ongoing to develop methods for controlling and sustaining the fusion reactions.
Electric fusion has the potential to be more efficient and have fewer safety concerns compared to traditional nuclear fusion methods. It also does not produce radioactive waste.
One of the main challenges in developing electric fusion technology is achieving the high energy densities required for the fusion reaction to occur. Additionally, controlling and sustaining the fusion reaction is also a major hurdle that scientists are working to overcome.