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 Man-made star to unlock cosmic secrets

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sky otter
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sky otter


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Man-made star to unlock cosmic secrets Empty
PostSubject: Man-made star to unlock cosmic secrets   Man-made star to unlock cosmic secrets Icon_minitimeMon May 25, 2009 8:07 pm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8044620.stm

Man-made star to unlock cosmic secrets

By Jonathan Fildes
Science and technology reporter, BBC News

When the world's most powerful laser facility flicks the switch on its first full-scale experiments later this month, a tiny star will be born on Earth.

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) in California aims to demonstrate the feasibility of nuclear fusion, the reaction at the heart of the Sun and a potentially abundant, clean energy source for the planet.

But whilst many eyes at the facility will be locked on the goal of satisfying humanity's energy demands, many scientists hope to answer other fundamental questions for mankind.

"In recreating the process of fusion it was always understood that we could pursue three areas of interest and value," explained Dr Erik Storm of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), the home of NIF.

First and foremost, NIF has been built for national security purposes, to study the conditions that exist in nuclear explosions and the way that nuclear weapons perform.

"That gives you an ability to maintain a credible nuclear deterrent in the absence of underground nuclear testing," said Dr Storm.

"Then, we can study the physics of fusion - can you make a fusion power plant here on our planet? And we can do basic physics and planetary science."

Right on time

It is this last area that has got the attention of scientists around the world, who hope to use the machine to study distant phenomena, such as the formation of planets or the violent explosions of supernovae, from the comfort of the lab.

HOW NIF TRIGGERS FUSION

A pea-sized spherical capsule is filled with fusion fuel
This comprises a 150-microgram mix of deuterium and tritium
The NIF laser set-up pulses for 20 billionths of a second
For that time, it generates about 500 trillion watts
That's equivalent to five million million 100-watt light bulbs
All the laser power is focused on to the capsule's surface
The fuel is compressed to a density 100 times that of lead
It is heated to more than 100 million degrees Celsius
Under these extreme conditions, fusion is initiated


How to build a star on Earth
"To understand where we find ourselves in the Universe and what we find ourselves made of, one really needs to understand exploding stars," explained Professor Paul Drake of the University of Michigan.

He is just one of a number of researchers waiting in the wings at NIF who hope to test their theories using the giant facility.

"At NIF you can schedule a supernova explosion for Thursday at nine in the morning instead of waiting for one to happen by accident in the Universe," said Dr Storm.

"And you can change experiments each time. So you can do a supernova explosion again, and again and again."

Other facilities, such as the Omega laser at the University of Rochester in New York, are already used for this kind of test.

But NIF's 192 lasers will deliver more energy than any facility has ever done, giving scientists an unprecedented glimpse into what are usually distant cosmic processes.

During fusion experiments, the beams briefly focus 500 trillions watts of power - more than the peak electrical generating power of the entire United States - on to a ball-bearing-sized pellet of hydrogen fuel.

See how the laser works

The intense energy creates temperatures of 100 million degrees and pressures billions of times greater than Earth's atmospheric pressure, forcing the hydrogen nuclei to fuse and a colossal amount of energy to be released.

In the astrophysical experiments, however, the fuel pellet would be substituted for a half-sphere of layered elements, designed to mimic the core of a star.

The periodic table that we learn about when we first start chemistry is fundamentally altered at pressures of a million atmospheres

Professor Ray Jeanloz
UC Berkeley
"You choose the material and the structures between them to be relevant to what happens when the star explodes," explained Professor Drake.

"The laser would strike the centre - the analogue of the core of the star- launching a tremendously strong shock wave that would blow the material apart."

The whole experiment may take just billionths of a second, meaning the explosion has to be monitored in incredible detail by a suite of sensors.

"The challenge is to do experiments that reproduce the conditions that occur and then scale the results to the astrophysical environment."

This should allow the researchers to probe the insides of stars and supernovae in unprecedented detail and understand more about how these astronomical objects came into being.

Diamond showers

But it is not just astrophysicists who are excited about getting their hands on NIF. Planetary scientists also want to get hold of the machine to test their theories about how planets and solar systems formed.


Hydrocarbons would actually decompose to a mixture of hydrogen and a carbon - the end result being that diamonds would actually be hailing out of the atmosphere.

Ray Jeanloz
"The architecture of the Solar System was very likely controlled to some extent by the existence of planets like Jupiter," said Professor David Stevenson of the California Institute of Technology.

The gravity of the giant planet controlled the position of vast clouds of dust and debris in our cosmic neighbourhood and therefore what building blocks were available to form the other planets, including Earth.

And since 300 gas giants that have a similar mass or are bigger than Jupiter have recently been found orbiting other distant stars, understanding how and when these giants form could also help shed light on the evolution of other planetary systems.

To do this, scientists have turned to NIF to try to understand more about the extreme temperatures and pressures at the heart of the planets and their effects on matter.

Previous generations of experimental facilities were able to create pressures up to a million times that found at sea level on Earth; NIF's lasers will be able to produce pressures up to billions of atmospheres.

"These are conditions that exist inside these super giant planets," Professor Ray Jeanloz, of the University of California, Berkeley, told BBC News.

At these crushing pressures, he said, the conventional understanding of chemistry and the behaviour of materials is turned on its head.

"The periodic table that we learn about when we first start chemistry is fundamentally altered at pressures of a million atmospheres," he said.

"By a billion atmospheres, we expect even more dramatic changes."




Giant laser experiment powers up
Laser vision fuels energy future
For example, at millions of atmospheres, the bonds between atoms begin to break down. At billions of pressures, the atoms themselves begin to be crushed.

"This regime has never been explored before," Professor Jeanloz told BBC News.

Scientists hope to probe what happens to abundant elements such as hydrogen and helium, as well as life-critical materials such as carbon and water.

"It's only been in the last year that the theoretical community has really pursued these calculations. We're just beginning to get a more detailed sense [of what might come out of NIF]."

However, even lower pressure experiments hint that the results may range from the exotic to the bizarre.

For example, tests have shown that hydrogen - the most abundant element in the Universe - becomes a metallic fluid at pressures similar to those found inside the Earth.

Whilst at higher pressures, such as those found on Jupiter, stranger things begin to happen.

"Hydrocarbons would actually decompose to a mixture of hydrogen and a carbon," explained Professor Jeanloz. "The end result being that diamonds would actually be hailing out of the atmosphere.

"That's the kind of process you would never have guessed unless you had studied the materials themselves."


and a vid that i can't get to here or to even link to..sorry again go to link it's at the bottom

Take a ride on a beamline in this National Ignition Facility promotional video
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sky otter
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sky otter


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Registration date : 2009-02-01

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PostSubject: Re: Man-made star to unlock cosmic secrets   Man-made star to unlock cosmic secrets Icon_minitimeSat May 30, 2009 7:41 pm

and then this article



Laser fusion plant delivers the power of the stars
Sustainability
By Emma Woollacott
Friday, May 29, 2009 05:52
vote
nowBuzz up!
Livermore, CA - A fusion ignition facility which uses the power of lasers to turn tiny hydrogen pellets into thermonuclear energy is to open in California today.

The device is expected to be the first to create more energy than it uses, releasing ten to 100 times more energy than the amount of laser energy required to initiate the fusion reaction.

It is hoped that the $3.5 billion National Ignition Facility (NIF) will pave the way for commercial laser fusion power stations - potentially providing clean, almost limitless energy.

The NIF's laser - the most powerful in the world - will aim 192 beams of light at an area half a millimeter square in a burst lasting five billionths of a second. The beams produce a shock wave that slams into a tiny pellet of frozen hydrogen. This generates a temperature of tens of millions degrees C and a pressure of many billions of atmospheres, replicating the conditions found within a star. The hydrogen atoms fuse, producing helium and energy.


Image: All of the energy of NIF's 192 beams is directed inside a gold cylinder called a hohlraum, which is about the size of a dime. A tiny capsule inside the hohlraum contains atoms of deuterium (hydrogen with one neutron) and tritium (hydrogen with two neutrons) that fuel the ignition process.
Credit is given to Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and the Department of Energy under whose auspices this work was performed.



The facility will ramp up gradually to full power over the next year. There are hurdles: the hydrogen pellets cost around $40,000 each to produce because of the need to make them perfectly spherical. In addition, the laser can currently only fire half a dozen times each day, with the pellets requiring careful placement each time.

The scientists hope to increase the rate to ten times a second by firing the hydrogen pellets into the fusion chamber.

The NIF also has a major security application for the US, as it will be the first facility to be able to perform controlled experimental studies of thermonuclear burn.

http://www.tgdaily.com/html_tmp/content-view-42639-178.html
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