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#61
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#62
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However, I just looked up the numbers, and it is indeed easier to drop into the Sun than to escape the system entriely. I was getting confused with the situation in LEO. (The sun will also hadly notice you dropping a few kilotons of Uranium into it; AFAIK, it wouldn't notice much if you dropped the entire planet Earth into it) Quote:
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(And the problem is that nuclear terrorism is a tactical thing - strategic nuclear war has nothing to do with whether or not the US should build breeder reactors) Quote:
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Didn't know about that, thanks. ![]() Quote:
Science fiction is already reality, it's just not very well distrubuted. (Across reality or science fiction)Quote:
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Last edited by Clarke; 11-17-2011 at 06:06 PM. |
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#63
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"Space, says the introduction to the guide, is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind bogglingly big it is. And so on." |
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#64
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#65
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#66
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My concern would be in general that some day it will go wrong - some miscalculation, technical failures and the stuff crashes on the ground or is dispersed in the air. A few kilos of plutonium for example (and same is likely for other wastes as well) dispersed in the atmosphere could kill many millions. Quote:
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Of course it would in theory be possible to not use these materials, but no country that I am aware of has nuclear power plants and not at some point also developed nuclear weapons. So giving nuclear power to a country will eventually result in it becoming a nuclear war power. This is why everybody is making such a fuss about Iran these days... Quote:
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![]() Other problems with that technology as mentioned in the article I tried to link (I have the german version on paper) are that it will actually consume lithium, not tritium and deuterium from sea water. Lithium however is a limited resource (and one used for batteries in future electric cars to a degree that it may become very expensive and rare). Also as of yet, no material has been found that can reliably withstand the radiation of the fusion, capture it reliably and pass the heat on to the Lithium. All the tested materials became brittle and decayed fast. Thats a problem if the thing is going to last for some years until these, then radioactive parts, will have to be exchanged. Another problem seems to be the ratio of neutrons emitted in fusion and neutrons captured by the lithium. It seems that the lithium bascially would have to catch all the neutrons of the reaction to produce enough tritium to fuel the reaction again... Quote:
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Know your idols: Who said "Hitler killed five million Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs.". (Solution: "Mahatma" Ghandi) Stop terraforming Earth (wordpress) "Humans are storytellers. These stories then can become our reality. Only when we loose ourselves in the stories they have the power to control us. Our culture got lost in the wrong story, a story of death and defeat, of opression and control, of separation and competition. We need a new story!" |
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#67
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Errata: I actually made a mistake in my solar calculations. The numbers I worked with are off by a bit. The reason was that I did not read the charts properly (surprised no one else found this out
) . So what the chart says is in fact that there are around 1200 (Spain well over 2000, Scotland about 700) kWh/m² coming to the ground. That includes an average over nights and days and includes clouds and seasons. The average use of electricity a single person household in Germany is about that (1200kWh), so for one person, a circle with 1m20 diameter would provide enough raw energy, a dish of about 2m would be enough given 30% efficiency. That does however not include industry and public electricity consumption. In my original calculation above, I was implying that this would also be included in the 2-3 meter dish per person. Private household energy consumption is about 1/5 to 1/4 of the electricity consumption of the country. So to fuel that demand, about 5 m² for Germany and about 10m² for Scotland would provide the raw energy needed. At 30% efficiency that would triple these numbers to 15 resp 30 m² per Person. That would actually be a 4m resp a 6m dish per person if all electricity of all industry is included. That would not literally have to translate to 4m dishes standing on the roofs of all private houses and such, but they could also be on top of commercial and industrial buildings or alongside roads etc. In general this was also more of a number game to show that even in this case, a 4m diameter dish per person is not all that much. In a future renewable energy mix of course that would be amended by wind and biogas and demand could be reduced by at least 30% with higher efficient processes in industry, commercial appliances, transportation and private households.
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Know your idols: Who said "Hitler killed five million Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs.". (Solution: "Mahatma" Ghandi) Stop terraforming Earth (wordpress) "Humans are storytellers. These stories then can become our reality. Only when we loose ourselves in the stories they have the power to control us. Our culture got lost in the wrong story, a story of death and defeat, of opression and control, of separation and competition. We need a new story!" Last edited by auroraglacialis; 11-21-2011 at 11:41 PM. |
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#68
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Last edited by Clarke; 11-22-2011 at 02:55 AM. |
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#69
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You know that not everyone is an enormous energy hog. For example, I just need to keep my computer on as much as possible(read all the time), to see something via light sources and be able to keep myself warm down here in the cold, dark north. I must admit that I have a soft spot for aesthetics lights, especially when it is really dark here, but currently I do not have any plans in mind for energy powered vanity. I mean come on, how are we supposed to make anything better in this world if we assume that every progress will always be offset by stupidity of the masses? Like Clarke said, there's a certain limit to personal energy consumption, because even the stuff that consumes energy usually costs money in itself, so we can always count on money to keep people in check, as sad as it is. |
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#70
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Btw, this discussion is great. |
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#71
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I'm only a computer hardware geek, and my latest subject to geek about has been power consumption now that I have my awesome energy efficient Sandy Bridge, but then I look at graphs like these, and go :< Still, my 2500K is the second best when it comes to efficiency. It may not have the lowest idle consumption, but I have to be able to do more than just browse the internet on this machine, so I also need the computing power that is absent from the D525 and E-350. Now to get f@h running for the night... |
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#72
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#73
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Then again I know lots of humans who are like immune to cold for some reason, how they walk outside without a wool hat, or a hat of any kind in winter and wear just jeans when it's like below -20C or so. The mere thought of it makes me shiver. Maybe I should just turn myself into a pine tree and be done with it, because it's almost always way too cold in here. |
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#74
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Don`t make yourself crazy, we have the right and its ok to warm ourselves. Its nothing bad about it. And I believe that the problem is not one persons need for heat, its more the mass of energy consumers, and most of the energy systems are way very old, and no one spends money(i mean the big companies) to renew their systems.And you know the "Old school"-system with having an oven and burning some pieces of wood, which is renewable for a onefamilyhouse is the most romantic and most natural way to heat. Any one better ideas? |
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#75
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Actually there are about 4 fireplaces in this particular house, although one is a kiuas in sauna, so it doesn't really count in my opinion. And while it is used for heating, because it, and sauna has to be hot, it's still not something that can be used to warm other parts of the house, unlike the other three fireplaces. It's a pretty good support system aside from one part, the fuel, that is wood, has to be manually always gathered, stored, cut to smaller pieces and then taken inside for use, so it's not really easy, even though it is indeed romantic and natural. And now I'm sad because my mind goes to places where I can't follow... |
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