Uncle Albert's Cafe and Ǽ-Theory Bistro

Mike Hewson
Mike Hewson
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RE: Potentially the most

Message 66510 in response to message 66509

Quote:

Potentially the most useful machine ever :-)

Rep Rap


Clever gadget with a neat paradigm. If only it could do metal fabrication ....

Cheers, Mike.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

Rod
Rod
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Any Wagers?? Hands of the

Any Wagers??

Hands of the DoomsDay Clock will be Moved

Like I follow the Dow, TSX FTSE, I follow the Doomday Clock

I think it will go back one minute

There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot. - Aldo Leopold

Mike Hewson
Mike Hewson
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RE: Any Wagers?? Hands of

Message 66512 in response to message 66511

Quote:

Any Wagers??

Hands of the DoomsDay Clock will be Moved

Like I follow the Dow, TSX FTSE, I follow the Doomday Clock

I think it will go back one minute

It'll go forward - after the Copenhagen flop they'll need a compensating announcement. Gotta keep the doom industry rolling ...... :-)

Hooking climate change to a nuclear holocaust wagon? That's like giving an extra dollar to a bank robber. Why not include malaria? Malnutrition? Violent death? ..... the apocalyptic horsemen are as we speak doing very nicely. No wonder the 'less developed' countries walked out of Denmark, their agenda is immediate, real and barely arguable. I respect their contempt for opinions generated by those who sleep rather more safely at night. So if the nuclear scientists want to do a Punch & Judy show, fine ...... but be careful as you cross the road on your way to watch it.

Cheers, Mike.

( edit ) Sorry Rod, my hubris detector exploded when I read that article! :-)

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

Rod
Rod
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RE: RE: Any Wagers??

Message 66513 in response to message 66512

Quote:
Quote:

Any Wagers??

Hands of the DoomsDay Clock will be Moved

Like I follow the Dow, TSX FTSE, I follow the Doomday Clock

I think it will go back one minute

It'll go forward - after the Copenhagen flop they'll need a compensating announcement. Gotta keep the doom industry rolling ...... :-)


Hooking climate change to a nuclear holocaust wagon? That's like giving an extra dollar to a bank robber. Why not include malaria? Malnutrition? Violent death? ..... the apocalyptic horsemen are as we speak doing very nicely. No wonder the 'less developed' countries walked out of Denmark, their agenda is immediate, real and barely arguable. I respect their contempt for opinions generated by those who sleep rather more safely at night. So if the nuclear scientists want to do a Punch & Judy show, fine ...... but be careful as you cross the road on your way to watch it.

Cheers, Mike.

( edit ) Sorry Rod, my hubris detector exploded when I read that article! :-)

You made excellent points. They are pretty hypocritical, outdated and trying to stay relevant... But I remember the early sixties.

Edit: I remember the Cuban Missile Crisis. My mom had five dollars in her purse and she was concerned if she should go to the store and buy cans of soup.,in case we had to head for the basement. I think I was eight and it is burned in my memory. So I check in on these guys from time to time.

There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot. - Aldo Leopold

Mike Hewson
Mike Hewson
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RE: You made excellent

Message 66514 in response to message 66513

Quote:
You made excellent points. They are pretty hypocritical, outdated and trying to stay relevant... But I remember the early sixties. I still think it going to go back.:-)


Well, I have to give the contrary bet to keep the wager up! :-)

If it was simply a global nuclear war risk indicator I agree. I guess they are trying to morph it and update. Why they choose to enter the quagmire of a rather less well defined science is a boggle though. Alas it may demean their purpose - like the Al Gore Nobel boner.

Probably the climate change crew have finally woken up to who their audience is - several generations who have lived with nuclear threat ( by facing it or denying it ) - and thus have twigged that they need to align with that risk level to penetrate. My guess is the webcast thing reflects a drop in interest from the usual media, as the worm is turning there too.

Err, what was the wager? :-)

My memory just missed Cuban thing - two years old - and no missiles were ( I think ) pointed DownUnda.

Cheers, Mike.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

Rod
Rod
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RE: Err, what was the

Message 66515 in response to message 66514

Quote:


Err, what was the wager? :-)

My memory just missed Cuban thing - two years old - and no missiles were ( I think ) pointed DownUnda.

Cheers, Mike.

One Book. If I lose.. You receive one copy on' How to Teach Physics to Your Dog'.. It should help improve your excellent skills on answering questions on the Science form:-)

By the way.. It was with a bit of sarcasm that I follow the bulletin like I follow stock indices.

To this day. My Mom still says..'Keep it under your mattress':-)

There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot. - Aldo Leopold

Mike Hewson
Mike Hewson
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RE: RE: Err, what was

Message 66516 in response to message 66515

Quote:
Quote:


Err, what was the wager? :-)

My memory just missed Cuban thing - two years old - and no missiles were ( I think ) pointed DownUnda.

Cheers, Mike.

One Book. If I lose.. You receive one copy on' How to Teach Physics to Your Dog'.. It should help improve your excellent skills on answering questions on the Science form:-)


Yeah, I'll go for the canine demographic! :-) :-)

OK! If I lose you receive one copy of 'The First Three Minutes' by Steven Weinberg ... essentially it's The Big Bang for Dummies. :-)

Quote:

By the way.. It was with a bit of sarcasm that I follow the bulletin like I follow stock indices.

To this day. My Mom still says..'Keep it under your mattress':-)


I hear that! Actually thinking nuclear wise, I read recently that the USA has about 700 + metric tonnes of highly enriched uranium ( > 20% U235, some of it around 65% ) under lock and key. So that, per se, is for either reactor or weapons use, with ~ 180 tonnes marked as 'surplus to requirements' - whatever that might mean. I'm not aware, as you do, of figures for other nations. None-the-less the dragon still lives, and entire cities can be wiped out on a per kilograms basis.

[ Given that natural sources of uranium put U235 at ~ 0.7 % of the total uranium in ores, and the enrichment requires differentiating mass at the level of ( 238 - 235 ) / 238 ~ 1.3 % then the above stockpile represents an enormous technological and monetary investment. ]

Cheers, Mike.

( edit ) And then there's the plutonium, and the deuterium/tritium. Even 'depleted' uranium ie. predominantly U238 is quite toxic as a pure chemical ( heavy metal ) effect.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

Rod
Rod
Joined: 3 Jan 06
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Credit: 811266
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RE: [ Given that natural

Message 66517 in response to message 66516

Quote:

[ Given that natural sources of uranium put U235 at ~ 0.7 % of the total uranium in ores, and the

( edit ) And then there's the plutonium, and the deuterium/tritium. Even 'depleted' uranium ie. predominantly U238 is quite toxic as a pure chemical ( heavy metal ) effect.

As Danny DeVito said: Of course I've got lawyers. They are like nuclear weapons: I've got em coz everyone else has. But as soon as you use them they screw everything up.

This wisdom the US military knows.. There is no strategic or tactical advantage with nuclear weapons these days. As long as there is a certain degree of smart power and continuity between administrations, there will be a gradual reduction in nuclear weapons between the two antagonists that started this mess.

Yes the gene is out of the bottle. And I do not have any idea on how to control nuclear proliferation. I read somewhere that a strategy a long the lines on how nations react to public health issues like viruses spreading could be used to contain proliferation. The start, is convincing most nations that is in their best interest.

Reactors.. Uranium reactors are a lost cause.. There is an estimate there is about an 85 year supply of uranium left to be mined at current usage. Today, supplies of the stuff are tight. They produce toxic waste that nobody has come up with a cost effective and environmental solution to store the stuff. ( Who knows maybe be will go with with the Space 1999 solution and ship it to the moon:-))

I have been reading some on research on Liquid Metal Coolant Reactors. This technology has been around since the fifties. I read somewhere not officially but people who were in the loop that this promising technology was dropped for building fast breeders to supply the four horseman with fissile material.

What is the US going to do with that material I do not know. They refined it with borrowed dollars.. Hopefully they will bury it with their own dollars.

There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot. - Aldo Leopold

Rod
Rod
Joined: 3 Jan 06
Posts: 4396
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Sorry I am little behind the

Sorry I am little behind the times on current reactor technology..

A list of current Generation IV Reactor technologies being developed for deployment in the 2020 to 2030 time frame that can use those tons of fissile material in their fuel cycle.

Generation IV Reactors

What I was thinking was Thorium ( more abundant than uranium) used for fuel. There is a proliferation issue with the technology.. India is pursing this technology

Thorium

Edit: Yea.. I am relieved:-) .. I still like the Thorium solution as one the best

There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot. - Aldo Leopold

Mike Hewson
Mike Hewson
Moderator
Joined: 1 Dec 05
Posts: 6591
Credit: 320154225
RAC: 432572

RE: Sorry I am little

Message 66519 in response to message 66518

Quote:

Sorry I am little behind the times on current reactor technology..

A list of current Generation IV Reactor technologies being developed for deployment in the 2020 to 2030 time frame that can use those tons of fissile material in their fuel cycle.

Generation IV Reactors

What I was thinking was Thorium ( more abundant than uranium) used for fuel. There is a proliferation issue with the technology.. India is pursing this technology

Thorium

Edit: Yea.. I am relieved:-) .. I still like the Thorium solution as one the best


It's not often emphasised but activity is roughly inverse to half life - another way of saying that conservation of energy applies over all time scales. How quickly can one slide down a ladder? So a very long lived isotope doesn't do much every day, so to speak, while a short lived one is quite sparky.

I recall that in the 70's the criticism of Plutonium was continually stated as being due to it's million year plus persistence ( Pu242 ~ 3.8 million years ). Now while Plutonium is bloody dangerous, that is essentially because it is a readily aerolised/ingested/absorbed alpha emitter, regardless of half-life. But the talk was always the half life, by which ( sole ) criteria the Potassium in your house bricks would be devastating by comparison ( K40 ~ 13 billion years, but note it is a beta emitter ). So a handful of Actinium is way off scale in terms of immediate danger ( longest lived isotope Ac227 ~ 212 years, most a matter of seconds to days ) compared to U237 ( half-life decades ). If you like : I'd be 'happier' in a room full of tons of HEU compared to a teaspoon of Actinium.

The traditional 'natural' decay chain of Uranium is roughly Uranium ( U235 emit alpha ) -> Thorium ( Th231 emit beta )-> Protactinium ( Pa231 emit alpha ) -> Actinium ( Ac227 emit beta ) -> Thorium ( Th227 emit alpha ) -> Radium ( Ra 223 emit alpha ) -> Radon ( Rd219 emit alpha ) -> Polonium ( Po215 emit alpha ) -> Lead ( Pb211 ).

[ You go down two protons ie. two spots on the periodic table and down four in weight with alpha decays. With beta decay you go up one spot in the periodic table and ~ no weight change. ]

Of course reactors change all that by improving the odds on other 'lesser' reactions simply because you are kicking around a lot more energy in a small volume - hence the products and evolution of the fuel composition depends on excruciating detail ( geometry, time lines, suppression, moderators .... ). I think the point of Thorium is that you can burn down quicker to Lead - so the reactor 'ash' is far less dangerous. The prior 'fast breeders' would yield weapons grade Plutonium - the design manipulated the situation to enhance that.

Other sensible design ideas stem from the the dead-man switch paradigm - if all else fails the fuel arrangement will cool and shut down by default. So you site quenching rods above the hot core, then by chopping a rope so to speak they will fall in. As opposed to raising the rods from below by an active device. Or fuel rods are shaped so that they expand when heated thus reducing their cross-section for neutron capture. So it's from the mind of what Mr Murphy would come up with had he been a nuclear technician. If only the Cold War Paranoia had been fully applied to reactor designs .....

Cheers, Mike.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

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