• CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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    25 days ago

    Er, not really with fusion actually, unless you just mean “have made atoms fuse regardless of if it generates net energy or not” in which case we’ve had it for decades. We have managed net energy production if you compare the output of a very powerful laser used to compress the fuel to the energy of the resulting reaction, but crucially, the laser in question isn’t perfectly efficient, and only a fraction of the electrical energy put in is turned into laser energy in the beam. This means that we still don’t have net electricity production, and even once we finally get that, getting the tech efficient enough to produce enough electricity to be cost competitive will be a tough ask, especially as electricity from solar in particular has been going down in price of late.

      • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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        25 days ago

        That’s what I was talking about regarding the lasers. As far I understand that result, it’s net energy in a physics sense, as in the reaction itself produced more energy than put in, but because the energy put in isn’t electricity itself, and the conversion process between electricity and energy in the laser is inefficient, the entire machine as a whole isn’t energy positive, just the reaction. It can’t yet be used as an electric generator, unless the reporting I saw on this at the time was inaccurate

        • EleventhHour@lemmy.world
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          25 days ago

          I get what you’re saying, and you’re right on many ways (especially wrt the energy conversion), but the barrier to producing net-positive fusion has been overcome. And it’s just a matter of scaling it up at this point— which includes overcoming many new hurdles such as (more) efficient energy conversion.

          But none will be so insurmountable as the initial creating of net-positive reactions. That was the big one, and we did it.

          • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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            24 days ago

            I guess my objection then is that I tend to take “just scale it up” to imply “all the tech development hurdles are done, we have a working prototype of the machine we want to build, we just need to construct a physically larger one”, and so was taking the process of improving the efficiency of the reaction to useful levels and figuring out how to make a significantly more efficient laser as “we don’t have this technology done yet, because we still have these milestones left”. In other words, we’re just arguing from confusion over different definitions of a word rather than the reality of what those words are referring to

            • EleventhHour@lemmy.world
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              24 days ago

              I never claimed that all of the development hurdles were done. Far from it. But if you wish to object to my phrase, “just scale it up“, then you can certainly criticize me for oversimplifying the matter.

      • n3m37h@sh.itjust.works
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        25 days ago

        Its been a decade away since 80’s. We should have been working on MSR and make them sustainable before getting to the next stage

        • EleventhHour@lemmy.world
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          25 days ago

          It’s not a binary, not really.

          We have achieved net-positive fusion as of last year. That’s the achievement we needed to move to the next stage, and it’s the one which was always a hopeful “maybe”. But we finally did it. It’s imperfect and needs to be refined and scaled up (another Herculean effort, to be sure), but we’ve crossed from the “is it even possible?” to the “we proved it can be done, now let’s make this into a practical technology.”

          So, when scientists claim 10-20 years from now, it’s no longer hopeful speculation but a well-educated projection based on current development.