[my italics] Neither I, nor anyone else, can publically say what is or is not significant in this regard as there is no experimental measures to justify whether that is true or not. It remains guesswork, poss with a mix of simulation (see below!)TallDave wrote:Sure, but that energy doesn't vanish, it gets passed to one or the other ion. Since the ions don't get lost to upscatter to any significant degree...Each time ions don't fuse when they meet (which is 3-sigma statistically all the time!), they loose energy.
I don't understand what you're saying there. Are you saying electrons give up their energy to the wall, or not?TallDave wrote:except to the electrons, which can upscatter to the wall, but tend to give up all their energy doing so -- Joel's latest simulation suggests this process is very efficient and in fact satisfies Rider's requirement in that respect).
... simulations.... hmmm...... the same type that said a JET sized tokamak would break even 30 years ago?TallDave wrote: Chacon et al did the full bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck simulation and it says large Q values are possible with partial thermalization.
So, what would this same simulation suggest about magnetically confined toroidal plasmas with partial thermalisation? Surely, whatever can be done in a Polywell by such means can be done better in a toroidal plasma (with no cusps)?
No plasma experiment that I have ever heard of has done what was predicted for it. Plasma always does something a bit different to any simulations of it.