• Welcome to the new COTI server. We've moved the Citizens to a new server. Please let us know in the COTI Website issue forum if you find any problems.
  • We, the systems administration staff, apologize for this unexpected outage of the boards. We have resolved the root cause of the problem and there should be no further disruptions.

Teen builds nuclear fusion reactor in basement

Not really a nuclear fusion reactor, more like a plasma creation chamber. But I did hear that the EU and other countries are going to build a real experimental fusion reactor in France in a few years.
 
Teen builds nuclear fusion reactor in basement
(Iain Thomson, vnunet.com 21 Nov 2006)

Parents not concerned at antics of junior boffin


An American teenager has built a working nuclear fusion reactor in the basement of his parents' home.

Thiago Olson, 17, spent over 1,000 hours and two years getting the reactor to work, scavenging old equipment, buying components on eBay and persuading manufacturers to give him large discounts.

The reactor works by sucking the air from a reaction chamber and injecting in deuterium, a form of hydrogen. A charge of 40,000 volts is then applied, using equipment from a gutted mammogram scanner, forming a small ball of plasma.

"Originally, he wanted to build a hyperbolic chamber," Olson's mother Natalice told the Detroit Free Press, adding that she promptly said "no". But, when he asked about the nuclear fusion machine, she relented.

"I think it was pretty brave that he could think that he was capable to do something so amazing," she said.

The process itself is safe since the reaction ends as the power drops. It emits very low levels of X-rays which are not at harmful levels.

Olson, who is nicknamed 'Mad Scientist' by his friends, intends to pursue a career in physics research.

"I thought he was going to be a cook, because he liked to mix things," said Natalice Olson.
His mom seems as clueless as the parents in the movie "Real Genius."


Simon Jester
 
X-rays sounds like a guess. If he really had D-D fusion, IIRC, the energy comes off as energetic He4 ions and a few neutrons (from a side reaction.

His mom wouldn't let him build a "hyperbolic chamber" because it was too dangerous? More
dangerous than using old medical equipment to exite flammable gas past incadescence?

(Maybe she meant hypobaric, but still...)
 
This is the best line in the article:

Originally, he wanted to build a hyperbolic chamber," Olson's mother Natalice told the Detroit Free Press, adding that she promptly said "no". But, when he asked about the nuclear fusion machine, she relented.

What a cool mum.

Ravs
 
Does anyone know where info on the nuclear fusion reactor that came about when an American Scientist hypothosised about a different shaped chamber but no one would fund him, so the British built a full scale one out of spare parts in their spare time with no budget, and when they tested it it worked better than anyone expected?

Or am I thinking of something else?

Best Regards

Ewan
 
Back
Top