Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
Many kinds, few comparable.
- Beelzquill
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Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
I'd like some nuclear fusion, is that what fusion power is?
Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
Fusion power is using nuclear fusion to generate electricity. Fusion engines is using nuclear fusion to fly a spacecraft. Like this.Beelzquill wrote: ↑Fri Apr 23, 2021 7:17 pm I'd like some nuclear fusion, is that what fusion power is?
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- Captain
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Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
The correct answer is the fusion dance
Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
Fusion power's gonna hopefully solve the problem of getting cheap practically unlimited energy, hopefully, so yeah. That one. (Might also solve the helium shortage, so that's a bonus )
Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
Helium is one of the few gases so light that it can escape the gravity of the Earth. As it can't chemically bond with other elements (as a noble gas), it is slowly lost. Most helium we have today has been extracted with natural gas.
Of course, fusion power generation might require more helium especially if we use a He3 fuel cycle.
Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
I got the lost. But I thought we had been separating it from something. A byproduct of gas mining makes sense. I didn't know where we got it from in the first place. Thank you.TGLS wrote: ↑Mon Apr 26, 2021 3:36 amHelium is one of the few gases so light that it can escape the gravity of the Earth. As it can't chemically bond with other elements (as a noble gas), it is slowly lost. Most helium we have today has been extracted with natural gas.
Of course, fusion power generation might require more helium especially if we use a He3 fuel cycle.
Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
I believe there's so little He3 on earth that it's unrealistic to expect it to be used as a fusion fuel source at least initially. I think deuterium and tritium are much more likely, and those reactions do produce helium. I think the general thinking is He3 would either need to be produced by other fusion reactions, or else mined from the moon which is thought to have a lot of it.
As for helium, yeah, there's been supply issues — I'm not sure if it's as far as a shortage yet, but certainly problems getting it — which have been steadily increasing until COVID struck, when there was a bit of a respite due to lower industrial and party balloon usage (albeit probably a temporary one; we'll see). The price of helium has been steadily climbing for a while now, and some important scientific uses have had it restricted.
Frankly helium in party balloons should probably be banned at this point. Besides, wouldn't hydrogen party balloons be cool — imagine the squeaky pops
As for helium, yeah, there's been supply issues — I'm not sure if it's as far as a shortage yet, but certainly problems getting it — which have been steadily increasing until COVID struck, when there was a bit of a respite due to lower industrial and party balloon usage (albeit probably a temporary one; we'll see). The price of helium has been steadily climbing for a while now, and some important scientific uses have had it restricted.
Frankly helium in party balloons should probably be banned at this point. Besides, wouldn't hydrogen party balloons be cool — imagine the squeaky pops
Re: Friday Poll #008 - Fusion
The only fusion I'm familiar with is con