#4859
Aeronaut
Participant

Ormond Otvos wrote: Not to be offensive, but merely to relay the likely impression a naive reader might get from reading it, the wikipedia entry for focus fusion redirects to Eric Lerner, who is mostly painted as a weirdo who’s got his own view of the origin of the universe.

Now you and I might be able to correct for that, but if you want focus fusion to be a concept in its own right, standing separate from the other aneutronic processes, someone authoritative needs to build a wikipedia entry for focus fusion. I can start the article, but some of you senior bloggers would need to fill it out.

Wikipedia is a very important source of information for the average person who just barely uses the internet, such as a congressional staffer, or the funding researcher for a venture capital firm.

I just went to wikipedia, where I have an old account, still active, and have found many changes stiffening up the quality of the articles, which is a good thing. However, that means that I need strong references to put in the articles, and a thorough explanation of the uniqueness of focus fusion.

I don’t think it’s enough to have a focus fusion link at the bottom of an article about Eric Lerner. Anyone skilled at composing wikipedia articles?

Here’s a very rough draft:

”’Focus Fusion”’ is a specific aneutronic method for producing electricity from plasma fusion of a boron compound and hydrogen, by generating a metastable toroidal plasma between a central post electrode and several surrounding post electrodes, from a large ultracapacitor voltage source.

The plasma so generated automatically collapses in such a fashion as to generate charged particles that exit through a coil that converts them directly to electricity, with no moving parts. Incidental x-rays are also converted to electricity using a multilayer wrap of several elements to cover the wide range of x-ray frequencies generated.

Emission of neutrons is very low, thus overcoming one of the most important objections to such processes, and the process proceeds by repeated impulses, occurring the low kilocycle range.

The process is much cheaper than tokamak to build and has recently (October 2009) achieved actual fusion and produced energy.

Excellent synopsis. Although I agree with your take on the first impression of the wiki article about Eric, I believe that it is a very effective filter. We’ll have our corporate-grade fanboys soon enough. Anybody willing to invest $4M to $20M before 2011 is not going to be ‘normal’.