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Iter to be built in France?
This is where you can discuss your homework, family, just about anything, make strange sounds and otherwise discuss things which are really not related to the Lancer-series. Yes that means you can discuss other games.
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this ITER thing is a terrible idea, scientists messing around with things they don';t understand. It won't work, it's bound to go wrong, at very best it will just be an expensive heap of scrap, at worst it'll blow a hole in the planet and irradiate half the globe - that's if it doesn't destroy everything, which it might. Why can't stuff just be left alone?
The idea of making a fusion reactor for power usage is a great idea but (and there is always a but) like all other forms of powerful energy sources..IE atomic and fission, some egg head scientist and dictator with a hardon for smiting the world governments and a want to take over the known world, will turn this miraculous technology in time into a devistating weapon....it is a scary thought to think some terrorist in a few decades could have a bomb with the power of a star!!!
just think of teh book/movie....Sum of All fears....nuff said
"To live is to die....but living is to die slowly..why waste time on trivial things just play as hard as you can"
just think of teh book/movie....Sum of All fears....nuff said
"To live is to die....but living is to die slowly..why waste time on trivial things just play as hard as you can"
France decided to bid to construct ITER inside their own homeland? What a switch. I guess they ran out of polynesian islands to exploit while testing their dirtier nuclear weapons.
Current thinking, whether right or wrong, appears to be that fusion reactors are cleaner than fission ones. Certainly uses less fuel to produce the same amount of energy as fission ones.
@Kimk.... Reason why South Korea would endorse the project in Japan is because the idea is to bring the technology into a geographic area. If it is done in France, the technology will be, mainly European. If it is done in Japan, it brings the focus of it into the Far East where South Korea also stands to gain from it. It's one of those "politicized" things about science and technology that, unfortunately, is a fact of life. Besides, if Japan were to win the bid, South Korean and American scientists also would be participants in the project. It would give the NIMBY factor in S. K. ease of mind as well.
What's funny is that the anti-nuclear camp in Japan is quite vocal and it is odd that no mention of it is made in the news piece.
If you look at where the Far East economies are going (mainly Taiwan, S. Korea and Japan... but also China itself but not as directly connected on this issue) the path to continued growth is in the high technology and science sectors. Also, when you consider these three countries and then remember that China (mainland) has awakened, the need to stay ahead of the curve to be able to remain in competition with China should be fairly obvious (you cannot beat mainland China on cheap labor).
Also, it should be obvious why China and Russia would prefer France to win the bid. China because it cannot tolerate any of the other Far East countries being even further ahead of itself in technology, especially fusion technology, and Russia because of the same concern as China but also its historical predisposition against competitor nations in the Far East.
Current thinking, whether right or wrong, appears to be that fusion reactors are cleaner than fission ones. Certainly uses less fuel to produce the same amount of energy as fission ones.
@Kimk.... Reason why South Korea would endorse the project in Japan is because the idea is to bring the technology into a geographic area. If it is done in France, the technology will be, mainly European. If it is done in Japan, it brings the focus of it into the Far East where South Korea also stands to gain from it. It's one of those "politicized" things about science and technology that, unfortunately, is a fact of life. Besides, if Japan were to win the bid, South Korean and American scientists also would be participants in the project. It would give the NIMBY factor in S. K. ease of mind as well.
What's funny is that the anti-nuclear camp in Japan is quite vocal and it is odd that no mention of it is made in the news piece.
If you look at where the Far East economies are going (mainly Taiwan, S. Korea and Japan... but also China itself but not as directly connected on this issue) the path to continued growth is in the high technology and science sectors. Also, when you consider these three countries and then remember that China (mainland) has awakened, the need to stay ahead of the curve to be able to remain in competition with China should be fairly obvious (you cannot beat mainland China on cheap labor).
Also, it should be obvious why China and Russia would prefer France to win the bid. China because it cannot tolerate any of the other Far East countries being even further ahead of itself in technology, especially fusion technology, and Russia because of the same concern as China but also its historical predisposition against competitor nations in the Far East.
so it'd better go there
That way, not only does it get better engineering, but we stay safer
I'm skeptical about whether they will be able to control the reaction. You control fission by using special materials to absorb the neutrons that actually cause the reaction. But you can't do anything like that with fusion, once you start the reaction, it goes until there's no more fuel...
46 posts
• Page 2 of 4 • 1, 2, 3, 4