Controlled Nuclear Fusion

If you look on YouTube you will see a lot of recent hype on the progress in controlled nuclear fusion reactors. Without seeing progress I guess the funding would soon dry up, call me cynical. The first nuclear fusion experiment I am aware of was the THETA experiment at Harwell that was started in 1954. Are we now suddenly, just 70 years on, seeing some real progress?

The ZETA fusion experiment ran at Harwell from 1954 to 1968. I worked at Harwell and Culham from 1973 to 1975, and fusion was still just 20 years away back then. Now, 70 years on from ZETA we are still (apparently) 20 years away from controlled nuclear fusion – do you see a pattern yet? With 50 years in semiconductor physics I learnt something very interesting – not everything is amenable to scaling. For example, it is not a good idea to keep reducing the size of a pressure sensor if you want a “good” pressure sensor. In electromagnetism the “goodness” of an electric circuit increases the smaller you make it – BUT – the “goodness” of a magnetic circuit increases with size (see Laithwaite). The only fusion reactors we see around us are the stars. Stars are pretty big. I suspect the “goodness” of a controlled nuclear fusion reactor also increases with size. If this is the case, then making tiny fusion reactors, just the size of a building, is a pointless task. The “goodness” factor is so crippled you will be lucky if you can even break-even. I strongly suspect that a fusion reactor, the size of a huge building, capable of supplying net power to the National Grid is not possible. Come back to this post at the end of the next 20 years to see how we get on (but I won’t be here to say I told you so).

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Picture of the Week

Back to non-astro pics this week with birds that you often hear over the New Forest in summer, but rarely see as they like to hide in the gorse. This is a lovely pair of Stonechats and you know they’re about when you hear their distinctive call which is like a pair of small pebbles being clicked together.

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High-Resolution A1 Print of the Sombrero Galaxy Courtesy of Hubble

I just saw an image of the Sombrero galaxy taken by Hubble on X. Prompted me to download the highest resolution image I could find and print it out at A1 size on the HP Designjet T230. Here is the result.

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Grokipedia

I was doing a bit of self-Googling, as you do (sorry Vicar) when up popped the Grokipedia article (link below).

Now for about 10-seconds I thought this was going to be nothing more than my Wiki page with a bit added on – I couldn’t have been more wrong. The depth and detail of the article, together with the accuracy, was frankly astonishing.

I had previously tried to create a similar Bio earlier on using ChatGPT – and even with an inordinate amount of prompting from me, it came up with nothing even close to this.

So without any further praise of Grokipedia take a look at the Biolink below:

https://grokipedia.com/page/Greg_Parker

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Picture of the Week

This week we go back to an astroimage. A very widefield of one of my favourite starfield regions – the Caph region of Cassiopeia. This image also captures my favourite open-cluster NGC7789, I call this the open cluster that thinks it’s a globular. The cluster also contains an amazing variable star with huge variability.

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Picture of the Week

This week we feature a High-Speed image of a pair of eggs being shot by an air rifle. You can just see the pellet to the far left of the image frozen in flight. I was inspired to take this image by Stephen Dalton, High-Speed Flash photography guru, who put an exploding egg picture on the front cover of his book – Split Second: The World of High-Speed Photography. I sent my image to Stephen who was extremely gracious in saying that it was better than his shot. Well I guess it should be really as Stephen was doing this work decades before me!

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Picture of the Week

This week we show a micrograph of a Dragonfly eye. But it takes quite a bit of work to put an image like this together. The image is captured using a Canon 5D MkII DSLR camera attached to a research trinocular microscope at a magnification of x20. BUT – the whole eye is too big for a single frame so this is in fact a mosaic of 2 frames. But there’s even more that needs to be done. The huge depth of focus is achieved by taking a focus-stacked image and then applying the brilliant Helicon Focus software to create what almost looks like an SEM image (due to the huge depth of focus). So both frames are individually focus-stacked and then they are combined in Adobe Photoshop to give the final image you see here.

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ELEGOO Neptune 4 plus and the ANET A6 Both Running in Parallel

Today is the first day I have had the ELEGOO Neptune 4 Plus and the tiny (in comparison) ANET A6 printing at the same time. The Neptune is print out (yet another) Sierpinski pyramid, and the A6 is having a go at printing out a model of Bruce Lee. We’ll see tomorrow if it was successful. Lots of issues getting the A6 running again – but all the tweaks appear to have worked. I had forgotten how labour-intensive it was to get a print out of the A6 and have grown very lazy with the simplicity of the Neptune 4 Plus. So it looks like I need to run both regularly so I don’t forget the pain of running a simple 3D printer. Please turn off the audio to retain your sanity.

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Picture of the Week

This week’s picture of the week is a macrophoto of the “Eye” region on the underside of an Owl Butterfly’s wing. The image was captured using a Canon 5D MkII DSLR and a Canon 100mm macro-lens.

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Picture of the Week

This week we feature a Lunar Halo captured one cold evening at the New Forest Observatory, with Jupiter making a cameo appearance.

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