The Focus Fusion Society Forums Focus Fusion Cafe heaviest element plasmoid fusion? Reply To: heaviest element plasmoid fusion?

#13591
meemoe_uk
Participant

119 views and no replys. this forum should be a beehive of activity, but most of the time its a ghostly echoy cathedral. i don’t get it. Am I the only one interested in plasma science these days? Should I apply for the CERN and ITER budgets to be sent to my address?

Rant aside, looks like I’ll have to answer my own question.

Ok, so Eric said the plasmoid magnetic field is the 5th power of the charge of the matter in the plasmoid.
So far FoFu has worked with ionized deuterium. which has a charge of 1, and has resulted in a plasmoid temperature of 1.8 Giga K

now that George Gamow said that the temperature required for fusion between elements is proportional to something like half to 1 power of the product of charge of the ionized elements.

So I think its a no brainer. 5th power beats 1 power easy. Even if we say the product term in Gamow’s equation means the power is effectively 2, then still 5 >> 2. I don’t know the proportion between plasmoid magnetic field and plasmoid temperature but I’m guessing its higher than 2/5 power. Whatever the element, it will create a plasmoid with a magnetic field and temperature high enough to enable its own nuclear fusion.

therefore, by Eric’s model, all elements can be fused by their own micro plasmoids, just need a lightning bolt. Natural nucleo synthesis for the entire periodic table has been fundamentally solved, and DPFs will give us practical means of demonstration of fusion of any 2 elements.