Category - Digest

The Future’s So Bright…

… we really are going to need shades…

Imagine being dropped into the middle of an episode of “The Big Bang Theory.” Then imagine taking LSD. Then imagine that the episode runs for like 12 or 14 hours…

Now you’ve got some idea what this past Saturday was like for me…

The occasion was the 26th annual gathering of HEAS – The High Energy Amateur Science group – a loose-nit gang of high voltage, radiation, and fringe science enthusiasts from all over the country who gather at the home and lab of Richard Hull in Richmond Virginia to talk gizmos.

This was my fourth or fifth time attending this event, but even so I felt woefully “out of my league.” I attended because this is the best chance I have every year to visit with the people who inhabit Fusor.net – the site I started back in 1998 to foster discussion among people who are interested in Philo T. Farnsworth’s approach to nuclear fusion.

I felt out of place, but there I was…

I think the tone of the weekend was set early on, when I was chatting with an 18 year old from Seattle named Noah Hoppis, who pulled a small – wait for it – geiger counter! out of his pocket. He proceeded to explain how it works, how he got it, what he does with it, etc.

Noah was there with an older friend of his family, a woman named Linda who lives in the area and was providing transportation for the weekend. I watched as Linda’s eyes glazed over, and at one point she said, “I understand all the individual words, but once he starts stringing them together…. he loses me.”

Which is pretty much how I felt the entire day.

I am at best marginally conversant in these questions of advanced science and physics. Remember, I’m the guy who basically got flunked out of physics in high-school because I was a pain in the ass for the teacher. That was in the 11th grade, and I spent the semester in the principals office pulling wires out of an early kind of computer circuit board. The symbolism is pretty rich…

Despite my failure in any kind of academic scientific pursuit, I have some capacity for staying tuned in long enough to get a sense of the big picture, and maybe even some talent for distilliing the Broad Concepts into language that the average reader can comprehend. I’ve done it in two books, and occasionally somebody will tell me “you said that pretty clearly” or words to that effect. I smile and think to myself, “fooled ‘em again…”

So I spent the first two hours being a million miles – light years? – out of my comfort zone… thinking, “I have no business being here.”

After a few hours of that, I finally settled down and got my camera out and started taking some pictures.

First, here is Richard Hull himself, as his fusor runs on the apparatus around him. Just over his left shoulder is the fusion chamber itself, and over his right shoulder is the video image of the actual “star in a a jar” reaction inside that chamber:

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Now, of course, the reaction that Richard has created is pretty “low yield.” 1-2 million neutrons emitted per second may sound like a lot, but that level is safe to be in the same room with. Exponentially, that yield is expressed as 1x10E6 (1 times ten-to-the-sixth) “Breakeven” for a system like this is predicted to occur somewhere between 10E12 and 10E14. Let me do the math: that would be somewhere between 10 and 100 TRILLION neutrons per second. We ain’t there yet.

But fear not. Here’s my favorite single photo of the weekend:

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This is Scott Moroch and Jack Rosky, two students at a high school in Wayne New Jersey who are building – yes – their ow nuclear fusion reactor. What Scott is holding in his hand is a model of the fusion chamber they plan to build that they rendered in a 3D printer. The model is plastic, the real thing will be stainless steel (and considerably larger). Now THAT’s using new technology to create new technology…

Finally, my favorite demonstration of the weekend:

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….where in Robert Tubbs looks on and assists as Dr. Kevin Dunn from the Hampton-Sidney College in Virginia demonstrates a form of “Caveman Chemistry” – namely a prehistoric chemical process called “fire.”

Conducted in the presence of the Fusor, it’s an intriguing juxtaposition of “Fire Version One” with “Fire Version 2.” Kevin made the point that “civilization” essentially begins with the discovery and control of “Fire v1.0” What becomes of “civilization” if/when we finally control “Fire v2.0”?

And, not surprisingly, it is no easy feat to make fire from two pieces of wood. It takes some coordination to rapidly and repeatedly pull the bow back and forth to spin the spindle while pressing the spindle down against the second piece of wood. It takes a bit of practice and perseverance to get the hang of it.

Watching these young guys try their hand at making fire – and knowing that they would go home to resume their efforts to build and operate a fusion reactor, I came up with this new rule: You’re not aloud to make “nuclear fire” until you have demonstrated that you are capable of making “carbon fire.”

You know, first things first…

 

Bezos, Thiel, Allen and Musk: You’re Going To Need A Bigger Boat

Captains of Industry, in search of a Bigger Boat

As I was getting ready to spend this past weekend with “the science nerds” in Richmond VA, I read this article in Forbes.com:

America has six private-sector fusion projects underway, according to a new report by the research firm Third Way. PayPal co-founder and Silicon Valley investor Peter Thiel has backed Helion Energy of Redmond, Wash.  Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen has put money behind Tri ­Alpha Energy in Irvine, Calif., which has reportedly raised $140 million. And Bezos Expeditions, the investment fund of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, is backing a Vancouver company called General Fusion, which so far has raised $94 million.

…which set me to thinking about my own experience with the subject of “fusion,” and I posted this reply to Medium.com:

Bezos, Thiel, Allen and Musk:
You’re Going To Need A Bigger Boat

Point being, not so much that they need a “bigger” boat – I think those guys are already starting to grasp that – but that they may have already missed the boat that was carrying the cargo for which they seek.

I know, slightly “off topic” from my usual fare, but that’s what’s occupying my imagination this week…

Sunset Over Nickajack Lake

Ann and I spent two nights on the shores of Nickajack Lake near Chattanooga, our annual anniversary weekend excursion.
I swore I was going to stay off line for a few days. I did manage to not open e-mail for the duration, but I couldn’t resist posting this iPhone photo of the sunset as I went out on the dock to grill some bratwursts.
Sunday was the night of the Blood Moon. We didn’t think we were going to see it, because the sky was totally overcast as the moon rose. I fell asleep reading in bed, and when I woke up at around 10PM I thought to stick my head outside and, sure enough, a hole had opened in the clouds and we saw a few minutes of the red moon, and then the waxing eclipse.
Sometimes it’s better to just watch a thing than try to photograph it…

Sunset over Nickajack Lake, near Chattanooga, TN. #No #BloodMoon #toomanyclouds

The Great Failing of Restaurants Everywhere

Is there anything more annoying than ketchup that is served in these tiny little packets.

We had dinner Saturday night (before going to see Arlo Guthrie at City Winery for the ‘Alice’s Restaurant 50th Anniversary Tour’) at a nice little barbecue joint called “Slow and Low Barbecue Bistro.” The food was great. There were bottles of bbq sauce that we could squirt into little compotes for dipping. Why couldn’t do the same for ketchup is a mystery.

Instead, we had to tear open a half dozen of these little packets. Always a pain the ass. C’mon people, but the ketchup in a bottle, too.

The great failing of restaurants everywhere

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Ben Nevis from The Jacobite Steam Train

Another entry to “Scotland From The Roadside” from our trip in October, 2012.
The Jacobite Steam Train is a popular attraction since it goes over a bridge that the Hogwarts Express crosses in one of the Harry Potter movies. We took an all-day excursion from the town of Fort William to Mallaig Harbor and back. Here the train is almost back to Fort William, and the the mountain called Ben Nevis looms in the distance…

Another from the Jacobite Steam Train – approaching Fort William, Ben Nevis in the background. October, 2012 (three years ago… <*sigh*> @historicscotland @welovehistory @visitscotland @GreatBritain @instagood
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Stirling Castle

Stirling Castle, and the city that it looms over, played a large part in the history of Scotland. It was the principal residence of the medieval Scottish Kings, and the important Battle of Stirling Bridge took place near here in 1297.

The Scots have been fighting the English for their independence for as long as the two nations have occupied the same island. The battle continues to this day, though the English continue to hold the upper hand

Stirling Castle – the primary residence of the Scottish Monarchy – October, 2012

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The Rose of Rose Street – Edinburgh, Scotland

I’ve been going through a lot of the photos from our trip to Scotland in October, 2012 (was it really three years ago?!?!) and posting the ones I like to a page on Facebook called “Scotland From the Roadside.”

Here’s one from a fashionable section of Edinburgh. I love what you can get when you get down low with a wide angle lens..

The rose of Rose Street – Edinburgh, Scotland – October, 2012

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©2015 [email protected] aka @driver49

©2015 [email protected] aka @driver49

An Apparition in Steel and Light…

…suspended over 1st Avenue just outside the Ascend Amphitheater in downtown Nashville. I’m told the shape recalls the course of the nearby Cumberland River…
And, yes, another iPhone 6 photo…

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©2015 [email protected] aka @driver49

Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings …

…on stage at the Ascend Amphitheater, closing out the AmericanFest in their Nudie suits – which they ran home to get after watching Loretta Lynn onstage in like 300 pounds of sequins. Shot with iPhone 6, on digital zoom, hence the fuzziness…

“In gospel music everybody dies and goes to heaven. In folk music everybody just dies.” –Gillian Welch

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©2015 [email protected] aka @driver49