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Winter Man

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Posts posted by Winter Man

  1. So I've noticed it happen a few times on here, and it happened again just yesterday to one of my threads. You can have nothing but positive feedback in the thread itself, but the thread as a whole can show up as 'one star' putting other people off because only one person decided they didn't like it.

    I'd suggest simply not displaying thread ratings until at least three people have voted on it to get a more balanced view.

    edit: just noticed it applies to all forums, not just the suggestion one. Can't edit title.

  2. So now that we've got these shiny company logos, how about putting them to use? For example, a 'messageboard' screen in the space centre with contract bids from different companies. One company might be a little unreliable but cheap (lower max. heat on the engine?) or what have you. Since there's tweakables, it'd just be a matter of adjusting the max. settings of everything by a constant per company. Say you need more power and you don't care about cost, you switch your engine contract to a company who provides that.

    You could have it so that when you initially develop a part, you pay more for having it built in-house until you farm it out to contractors.

  3. Why would you want to go round nuking random planets in our solar system?

    Helioforming.

    The main obstacle as I think has been said is the pressure required to maintain a fusion reaction. If Jupiter could sustain fusion, it would already be doing so and be a brown dwarf. It's a nice idea, but it won't work as-is. The Mars trilogy had the nice idea of floating 'fusion lanterns' close to the surface that would suck hydrogen in, fuse it in a man-made fusion reactor and dump all the energy as light, making it as 'good as' a star for making the moons more habitable.

  4. So I had a thought the other day. Superconductors exhibit the Meissner effect which excludes the magnetic field from their interior. Moving charged particles generate a magnetic field. Would a superconductor 'exclude' charged particles that tried to move through it, e.g. high energy cosmic rays?

  5. Then as I said, cite clearly. I admit I was wrong; I didn't know they were still being funded by the DoD. In fact I'm amazed because Bussard's talk (which I had already watched) went into detail about how the DoE wouldn't fund them and the project would get killed quickly if the Navy funded them so much that it appeared in Congress, and how they had stopped being funded by the Navy entirely.

    Like these people?

    Bussard's been dead for a fair number of years, the company's out of his control. Dr. Nebel was in charge when they got Naval funding. Also, Greenpeace are full-blown-sandwich-board-doomsday-prophet nuts. They once tried to convince me global warming was a thing. Not bad, you think? It was completely redundant, this was in England at a hippy music festival. Everyone already knows.

  6. The main point is that it doesn't make your reactor radioactive, full stop. In a polywell, those alpha particles will bump into other matter and thus transmit thermal energy.

    That and it's a lot smaller, with all those neutrons you don't have to block.

    i think a direct conversion scheme for polywells exists, but you wont see it on first generation devices.

    It's integral to the design. The shell of the device is the direct conversion. Something to do with decelerating the particles by charging the shell to a voltage equivalent to whatever the particle energy is (4.2MeV?). I can't quite remember, I'm kind of drunk.

  7. I prefer to run it at 50/60Hz and convert that to mains voltage already

    EDIT: I'm wondering. If alt fusion tech like this succeeds to generate net energy first than ITER, what will happen to ITER? Do they will continue the research or not?

    It's a DC output, it'd need to go through some manner of smoothing and alternating before transmission anyway so they could be run at any frequency, really. The output is more like a square wave with the trough at 0V than a sine wave centred on it, basically. As for ITER, chances are it'd take a back seat but still be a really useful science experiment.

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