Search found 308 matches
- Thu Jun 12, 2008 1:27 pm
- Forum: Theory
- Topic: Making Electricity with the p-B Polywell
- Replies: 134
- Views: 70841
Not directly related, but just to finish up the description of the process, once the Alphas have been decellerated to generate the electricity, then there has to be a removal process. Or soon you're going to have less and less of a vaccuum. Can they be removed while still charged? So as to give some...
- Wed Jun 11, 2008 1:20 pm
- Forum: General
- Topic: The Military Sucks
- Replies: 40
- Views: 19074
The Ekranoplane is, in fact, a GEV (so that's 1 to 4 meters, yes). Which makes it an interesting possible use for fusion. As Eric points out, if you take out the fuel requirements, and simply assume that the plants are the same size (and a polywell might actually be smaller than the power plant on t...
- Tue Jun 10, 2008 6:20 pm
- Forum: Implications
- Topic: Tesla's Dream
- Replies: 17
- Views: 38459
Tesla's Dream
In another thread, somebody proposed that tractors could be run electrically with "tethers" (maybe I didn't understand the proposition, but it sounds like electric cords to me). If electric power is cheap enough, however, it might make it economical to start considering moving towards a real "wirele...
- Tue Jun 10, 2008 6:01 pm
- Forum: Implications
- Topic: Screw the Space Elevator, Lets Launch Loop
- Replies: 22
- Views: 21696
Hey, fusion power could get us into space cheap, making it easy to make that orbiting station which we'd use to make cheap launches... Oh... wait... that'd make it redundant at that point, wouldn't it? Fusion doesn't "cut both ways" it simply leapfrogs technologies that people envision as neccessary...
- Mon Jun 09, 2008 4:34 pm
- Forum: General
- Topic: The Military Sucks
- Replies: 40
- Views: 19074
- Mon Jun 09, 2008 4:27 pm
- Forum: General
- Topic: The Military Sucks
- Replies: 40
- Views: 19074
Actually I was thinking of something like a C-130 carrying one of Northrop's in-development 100KW lasers (think AC-130 Spectre). Can stay up forever, shoot whatever it wants as much as it wants... The problem with using it for cargo isn't it's weight, but the space it takes up. Heavy lifters already...
- Mon Jun 09, 2008 3:07 pm
- Forum: Theory
- Topic: magrid configuration brainstorming
- Replies: 632
- Views: 274721
Sure, I wouldn't expect that such a model would eliminate loss entirely. Merely that the deformation of the fields might be such that loss might be reduced. I understand that it might be difficult to model such a geometry, however. It just seemed intuitive to try to provide inbound momentum from all...
- Mon Jun 09, 2008 2:12 pm
- Forum: Theory
- Topic: magrid configuration brainstorming
- Replies: 632
- Views: 274721
Hi, total layman here. But I'm reading with a lot of interest. The geometry question is fascinating. At first, seeing the triangular-sided figure on page one that somebody posted, I was tempted to suggest an isocahedron, as it would have a very spherical shape (hence why they're often used to model ...