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  #1  
Old July 7th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion
Mike Jr.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 291
Default Nuclear power

On Jul 6, 11:20 pm, "Y.Porat" wrote:
On Jul 5, 6:21 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:



“Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight -
vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to
the environment and to humanity. The only solution is to halt the
expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing
plants.”http://www.greenpeace.org/internatio...paigns/nuclear


Patrick Moore, one of the founders of Greenpeace, had this to say,
“In the early 1970s when I helped found Greenpeace, I believed that
nuclear energy was synonymous with nuclear holocaust, as did most of
my compatriots. That's the conviction that inspired Greenpeace's first
voyage up the spectacular rocky northwest coast to protest the testing
of U.S. hydrogen bombs in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. Thirty years on,
my views have changed, and the rest of the environmental movement
needs to update its views, too, because nuclear energy may just be the
energy source that can save our planet from another possible disaster:
catastrophic climate change.”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...06/04/14/AR200...


Wind power and solar generation can’t hack it. So what are the
alternatives to nuclear/hydrocarbon power plants?
Brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis
The surest way to a low standard of living is energy poverty


Let us examine the waste balance sheet of a coal-fired vs. a nuclear
power plant.


A 1,000 Megawatt coal-fired power plant produces
solid wastes at a rate of 1,800 pounds per minute that includes
19 toxic metals such as arsenic
carcinogens such as benzopyrene
30 pounds of sulfur dioxide per second
As much nitrous oxide as 200,000 automobiles
50 times the radioactive emissions of an average nuclear power plant
Each (short) ton of coal contains
50 grams of Uranium
129 grams of Thorium


According to NCRP Reports No. 92 and No. 95, population exposure from
the operation of 1000-MWe nuclear and coal-fired power plants amounts
to 490 person-rem/year for coal plants and 4.8 person-rem/year for
nuclear plants. Thus, the population effective dose equivalent from
coal plants is 100 times that from nuclear plants.


Highly radioactive daughter particles amount to 3% (by volume) or
about .2 cubic meters from a year’s production from a 1,000 Megawatt
Light Water Reactor (LWR) power plant.


In that 3% you have the following significant radionuclides with their
half lives.
Gases
Kypton-85 10.7 years
Xenon-133 5.3 days
Solids
Strontium-90 28.1 years
Molybdenum-99 66.7 hours
Iodine-131 8.1 days
Cesium-137 30.2 years
Cerium-144 285.0 days


After 30 half lives a radioactive material is deemed safe. Picking
the longest lived, Cesium-137 at 30.2 years, 30x30.2=906 years.


We are not talking about Yucca Mountain here; that is for wastes from
nuclear weapons production.


What about the remaining 97%? They can be immediately reused as
nuclear fuel. We recycle paper and not nuclear fuel?


In 1977, that gem of a president Jimmy Carter canceled the Barnwell,
South Carolina, reprocessing plant then nearing completion because of
an exaggerated danger of terrorists stealing our nuclear fuel and
chemically separating the plutonium from the uranium in order to build
nuclear weapons with it. They should live so long trying.


France, Germany, Japan, and Russia continued with their reprocessing
facilities and have assured themselves sources of readily available
nuclear fuel for the foreseeable future. I am sure that the terrorist
would never consider stealing from them.~


[Footnote .~ is the emoticon for irony]


My point? Start building nuclear reactors as fast as you can.


--Mike Jr


--------------------
why is no one talking about fusion ???!!!


Fission gets us out of the current oil crunch. Fusion is a longer
range solution.

"Current status

Despite optimism dating back to the 1950s about the wide-scale
harnessing of fusion power, there are still significant barriers
standing between current scientific understanding and technological
capabilities and the practical realization of fusion as an energy
source.[citation needed] Research, while making steady progress, has
also continually thrown up new difficulties.[citation needed]
Therefore it remains unclear that an economically viable fusion plant
is even possible.[16] An editorial in New Scientist magazine opined
that "if commercial fusion is viable, it may well be a century
away."[16] Ironically, a pamphlet printed by General Atomics in 1970's
stated that "By the year 2000, several commercial fusion reactors are
expected to be on-line."

Several fusion reactors have been built, but as yet none has produced
more thermal energy than electrical energy consumed. Despite research
having started in the 1950s, no commercial fusion reactor is expected
before 2050. The ITER project is currently leading the effort to
commercialize fusion power."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_power

--Mike Jr.


Y.Porat
----------------------------------


Ads
  #2  
Old July 7th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
Y.Porat
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,605
Default Nuclear power

On Jul 7, 1:31*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:
On Jul 6, 11:20 pm, "Y.Porat" wrote:



On Jul 5, 6:21 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


“Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight -
vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to
the environment and to humanity. The only solution is to halt the
expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing
plants.”http://www.greenpeace.org/internatio...paigns/nuclear


Patrick Moore, one of the founders of Greenpeace, had this to say,
“In the early 1970s when I helped found Greenpeace, I believed that
nuclear energy was synonymous with nuclear holocaust, as did most of
my compatriots. That's the conviction that inspired Greenpeace's first
voyage up the spectacular rocky northwest coast to protest the testing
of U.S. hydrogen bombs in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. Thirty years on,
my views have changed, and the rest of the environmental movement
needs to update its views, too, because nuclear energy may just be the
energy source that can save our planet from another possible disaster:
catastrophic climate change.”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...06/04/14/AR200...


Wind power and solar generation can’t hack it. *So what are the
alternatives to nuclear/hydrocarbon power plants?
* * * * Brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis
* * * * The surest way to a low standard of living is energy poverty


Let us examine the waste balance sheet of a coal-fired vs. a nuclear
power plant.


A 1,000 Megawatt coal-fired power plant produces
solid wastes at a rate of 1,800 pounds per minute that includes
* * * * * * * * 19 toxic metals such as arsenic
* * * * * * * * carcinogens such as benzopyrene
* * * * 30 pounds of sulfur dioxide per second
* * * * As much nitrous oxide as 200,000 automobiles
* * * * 50 times the radioactive emissions of an average nuclear power plant
* * * * * * * * Each (short) ton of coal contains
* * * * * * * * * * * * 50 grams of Uranium
* * * * * * * * * * * * 129 grams of Thorium


According to NCRP Reports No. 92 and No. 95, population exposure from
the operation of 1000-MWe nuclear and coal-fired power plants amounts
to 490 person-rem/year for coal plants and 4.8 person-rem/year for
nuclear plants. Thus, the population effective dose equivalent from
coal plants is 100 times that from nuclear plants.


Highly radioactive daughter particles amount to 3% (by volume) or
about .2 cubic meters from a year’s production from a 1,000 Megawatt
Light Water Reactor (LWR) power plant.


In that 3% you have the following significant radionuclides with their
half lives.
Gases
* Kypton-85 * * * * * * 10.7 years
* Xenon-133 * * * * * * *5.3 days
Solids
* Strontium-90 * * * * 28.1 years
* Molybdenum-99 * *66.7 hours
* Iodine-131 * * * * * * *8.1 days
* Cesium-137 * * * * *30.2 years
* Cerium-144 * * * * 285.0 days


After 30 half lives a radioactive material is deemed safe. *Picking
the longest lived, Cesium-137 at 30.2 years, 30x30.2=906 years.


We are not talking about Yucca Mountain here; that is for wastes from
nuclear weapons production.


What about the remaining 97%? They can be immediately reused as
nuclear fuel. *We recycle paper and not nuclear fuel?


In 1977, that gem of a president Jimmy Carter canceled the Barnwell,
South Carolina, reprocessing plant then nearing completion because of
an exaggerated danger of terrorists stealing our nuclear fuel and
chemically separating the plutonium from the uranium in order to build
nuclear weapons with it. *They should live so long trying.


France, Germany, Japan, and Russia continued with their reprocessing
facilities and have assured themselves sources of readily available
nuclear fuel for the foreseeable future. I am sure that the terrorist
would never consider stealing from them.~


[Footnote .~ is the emoticon for irony]


My point? *Start building nuclear reactors as fast as you can.


--Mike Jr


--------------------
why is no one talking about fusion ???!!!


Fission gets us out of the current oil crunch. *Fusion is a longer
range solution.

"Current status

Despite optimism dating back to the 1950s about the wide-scale
harnessing of fusion power, there are still significant barriers
standing between current scientific understanding and technological
capabilities and the practical realization of fusion as an energy
source.[citation needed] Research, while making steady progress, has
also continually thrown up new difficulties.[citation needed]
Therefore it remains unclear that an economically viable fusion plant
is even possible.[16] An editorial in New Scientist magazine opined
that "if commercial fusion is viable, it may well be a century
away."[16] Ironically, a pamphlet printed by General Atomics in 1970's
stated that "By the year 2000, several commercial fusion reactors are
expected to be on-line."

Several fusion reactors have been built, but as yet none has produced
more thermal energy than electrical energy consumed. Despite research
having started in the 1950s, no commercial fusion reactor is expected
before 2050. The ITER project is currently leading the effort to
commercialize fusion power."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_power

--Mike Jr.



Y.Porat
----------------------------------


i cantell you right now
that ITER is leading nowhere
it is a huge waist of mony
and worse waIst of PRECIOUS TIME !!

so now we come to my next point
since you are right that it will take a lot of time
(depends on investments in it )
therefore and just because of that
we must start right now
before later might be too late!
technically
and worse than that - international socially !! (social disaster )

ATB
Y.Porat
---------------------
  #3  
Old July 7th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
Mike Jr.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 291
Default Nuclear power

On Jul 7, 10:40*am, "Y.Porat" wrote:
On Jul 7, 1:31*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:





On Jul 6, 11:20 pm, "Y.Porat" wrote:


On Jul 5, 6:21 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


“Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight -
vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to
the environment and to humanity. The only solution is to halt the
expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing
plants.”http://www.greenpeace.org/internatio...paigns/nuclear


Patrick Moore, one of the founders of Greenpeace, had this to say,
“In the early 1970s when I helped found Greenpeace, I believed that
nuclear energy was synonymous with nuclear holocaust, as did most of
my compatriots. That's the conviction that inspired Greenpeace's first
voyage up the spectacular rocky northwest coast to protest the testing
of U.S. hydrogen bombs in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. Thirty years on,
my views have changed, and the rest of the environmental movement
needs to update its views, too, because nuclear energy may just be the
energy source that can save our planet from another possible disaster:
catastrophic climate change.”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...06/04/14/AR200...


Wind power and solar generation can’t hack it. *So what are the
alternatives to nuclear/hydrocarbon power plants?
* * * * Brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis
* * * * The surest way to a low standard of living is energy poverty


Let us examine the waste balance sheet of a coal-fired vs. a nuclear
power plant.


A 1,000 Megawatt coal-fired power plant produces
solid wastes at a rate of 1,800 pounds per minute that includes
* * * * * * * * 19 toxic metals such as arsenic
* * * * * * * * carcinogens such as benzopyrene
* * * * 30 pounds of sulfur dioxide per second
* * * * As much nitrous oxide as 200,000 automobiles
* * * * 50 times the radioactive emissions of an average nuclear power plant
* * * * * * * * Each (short) ton of coal contains
* * * * * * * * * * * * 50 grams of Uranium
* * * * * * * * * * * * 129 grams of Thorium


According to NCRP Reports No. 92 and No. 95, population exposure from
the operation of 1000-MWe nuclear and coal-fired power plants amounts
to 490 person-rem/year for coal plants and 4.8 person-rem/year for
nuclear plants. Thus, the population effective dose equivalent from
coal plants is 100 times that from nuclear plants.


Highly radioactive daughter particles amount to 3% (by volume) or
about .2 cubic meters from a year’s production from a 1,000 Megawatt
Light Water Reactor (LWR) power plant.


In that 3% you have the following significant radionuclides with their
half lives.
Gases
* Kypton-85 * * * * * * 10.7 years
* Xenon-133 * * * * * * *5.3 days
Solids
* Strontium-90 * * * * 28.1 years
* Molybdenum-99 * *66.7 hours
* Iodine-131 * * * * * * *8.1 days
* Cesium-137 * * * * *30.2 years
* Cerium-144 * * * * 285.0 days


After 30 half lives a radioactive material is deemed safe. *Picking
the longest lived, Cesium-137 at 30.2 years, 30x30.2=906 years.


We are not talking about Yucca Mountain here; that is for wastes from
nuclear weapons production.


What about the remaining 97%? They can be immediately reused as
nuclear fuel. *We recycle paper and not nuclear fuel?


In 1977, that gem of a president Jimmy Carter canceled the Barnwell,
South Carolina, reprocessing plant then nearing completion because of
an exaggerated danger of terrorists stealing our nuclear fuel and
chemically separating the plutonium from the uranium in order to build
nuclear weapons with it. *They should live so long trying.


France, Germany, Japan, and Russia continued with their reprocessing
facilities and have assured themselves sources of readily available
nuclear fuel for the foreseeable future. I am sure that the terrorist
would never consider stealing from them.~


[Footnote .~ is the emoticon for irony]


My point? *Start building nuclear reactors as fast as you can.


--Mike Jr


--------------------
why is no one talking about fusion ???!!!


Fission gets us out of the current oil crunch. *Fusion is a longer
range solution.


"Current status


Despite optimism dating back to the 1950s about the wide-scale
harnessing of fusion power, there are still significant barriers
standing between current scientific understanding and technological
capabilities and the practical realization of fusion as an energy
source.[citation needed] Research, while making steady progress, has
also continually thrown up new difficulties.[citation needed]
Therefore it remains unclear that an economically viable fusion plant
is even possible.[16] An editorial in New Scientist magazine opined
that "if commercial fusion is viable, it may well be a century
away."[16] Ironically, a pamphlet printed by General Atomics in 1970's
stated that "By the year 2000, several commercial fusion reactors are
expected to be on-line."


Several fusion reactors have been built, but as yet none has produced
more thermal energy than electrical energy consumed. Despite research
having started in the 1950s, no commercial fusion reactor is expected
before 2050. The ITER project is currently leading the effort to
commercialize fusion power."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_power


--Mike Jr.


Y.Porat
----------------------------------


i cantell you right now
that ITER *is leading nowhere
it is a huge waist of mony
and worse *waIst of PRECIOUS TIME *!!

so now we come to my next point
since you are right that it will take a lot of time
(depends on investments in it )
therefore and just because of that
we must start right now
before later might be too late!
technically
and worse than that - international *socially !! (social disaster )


Funding research is a little like betting on race horses. There is an
algorithm for dividing a $100 stake across the horses in a race based
purely on their odds. You reserve about 8% of your stake for the long
shot because occasionally they win and win big.

Fusion is a long shot and 8% of total research is (IMHO) optimistic.

Better to focus your money on horses with better odds.

--Cheers,
--Mike Jr


ATB
Y.Porat
---------------------- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


  #4  
Old July 8th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
Y.Porat
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,605
Default Nuclear power

On Jul 7, 9:53*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:
On Jul 7, 10:40*am, "Y.Porat" wrote:



On Jul 7, 1:31*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


On Jul 6, 11:20 pm, "Y.Porat" wrote:


On Jul 5, 6:21 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


“Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight -
vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to
the environment and to humanity. The only solution is to halt the
expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing
plants.”http://www.greenpeace.org/internatio...paigns/nuclear


Patrick Moore, one of the founders of Greenpeace, had this to say,
“In the early 1970s when I helped found Greenpeace, I believed that
nuclear energy was synonymous with nuclear holocaust, as did most of
my compatriots. That's the conviction that inspired Greenpeace's first
voyage up the spectacular rocky northwest coast to protest the testing
of U.S. hydrogen bombs in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. Thirty years on,
my views have changed, and the rest of the environmental movement
needs to update its views, too, because nuclear energy may just be the
energy source that can save our planet from another possible disaster:
catastrophic climate change.”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...06/04/14/AR200...


Wind power and solar generation can’t hack it. *So what are the
alternatives to nuclear/hydrocarbon power plants?
* * * * Brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis
* * * * The surest way to a low standard of living is energy poverty


Let us examine the waste balance sheet of a coal-fired vs. a nuclear
power plant.


A 1,000 Megawatt coal-fired power plant produces
solid wastes at a rate of 1,800 pounds per minute that includes
* * * * * * * * 19 toxic metals such as arsenic
* * * * * * * * carcinogens such as benzopyrene
* * * * 30 pounds of sulfur dioxide per second
* * * * As much nitrous oxide as 200,000 automobiles
* * * * 50 times the radioactive emissions of an average nuclear power plant
* * * * * * * * Each (short) ton of coal contains
* * * * * * * * * * * * 50 grams of Uranium
* * * * * * * * * * * * 129 grams of Thorium


According to NCRP Reports No. 92 and No. 95, population exposure from
the operation of 1000-MWe nuclear and coal-fired power plants amounts
to 490 person-rem/year for coal plants and 4.8 person-rem/year for
nuclear plants. Thus, the population effective dose equivalent from
coal plants is 100 times that from nuclear plants.


Highly radioactive daughter particles amount to 3% (by volume) or
about .2 cubic meters from a year’s production from a 1,000 Megawatt
Light Water Reactor (LWR) power plant.


In that 3% you have the following significant radionuclides with their
half lives.
Gases
* Kypton-85 * * * * * * 10.7 years
* Xenon-133 * * * * * * *5.3 days
Solids
* Strontium-90 * * * * 28.1 years
* Molybdenum-99 * *66.7 hours
* Iodine-131 * * * * * * *8.1 days
* Cesium-137 * * * * *30.2 years
* Cerium-144 * * * * 285.0 days


After 30 half lives a radioactive material is deemed safe. *Picking
the longest lived, Cesium-137 at 30.2 years, 30x30.2=906 years.


We are not talking about Yucca Mountain here; that is for wastes from
nuclear weapons production.


What about the remaining 97%? They can be immediately reused as
nuclear fuel. *We recycle paper and not nuclear fuel?


In 1977, that gem of a president Jimmy Carter canceled the Barnwell,
South Carolina, reprocessing plant then nearing completion because of
an exaggerated danger of terrorists stealing our nuclear fuel and
chemically separating the plutonium from the uranium in order to build
nuclear weapons with it. *They should live so long trying.


France, Germany, Japan, and Russia continued with their reprocessing
facilities and have assured themselves sources of readily available
nuclear fuel for the foreseeable future. I am sure that the terrorist
would never consider stealing from them.~


[Footnote .~ is the emoticon for irony]


My point? *Start building nuclear reactors as fast as you can.


--Mike Jr


--------------------
why is no one talking about fusion ???!!!


Fission gets us out of the current oil crunch. *Fusion is a longer
range solution.


"Current status


Despite optimism dating back to the 1950s about the wide-scale
harnessing of fusion power, there are still significant barriers
standing between current scientific understanding and technological
capabilities and the practical realization of fusion as an energy
source.[citation needed] Research, while making steady progress, has
also continually thrown up new difficulties.[citation needed]
Therefore it remains unclear that an economically viable fusion plant
is even possible.[16] An editorial in New Scientist magazine opined
that "if commercial fusion is viable, it may well be a century
away."[16] Ironically, a pamphlet printed by General Atomics in 1970's
stated that "By the year 2000, several commercial fusion reactors are
expected to be on-line."


Several fusion reactors have been built, but as yet none has produced
more thermal energy than electrical energy consumed. Despite research
having started in the 1950s, no commercial fusion reactor is expected
before 2050. The ITER project is currently leading the effort to
commercialize fusion power."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_power


--Mike Jr.


Y.Porat
----------------------------------


i cantell you right now
that ITER *is leading nowhere
it is a huge waist of mony
and worse *waIst of PRECIOUS TIME *!!


so now we come to my next point
since you are right that it will take a lot of time
(depends on investments in it )
therefore and just because of that
we must start right now
before later might be too late!
technically
and worse than that - international *socially !! (social disaster )


Funding research is a little like betting on race horses. *There is an
algorithm for dividing a $100 stake across the horses in a race based
purely on their odds. *You reserve about 8% of your stake for the long
shot because occasionally they win and win big.

Fusion is a long shot and 8% of total research is (IMHO) optimistic.

Better to focus your money on horses with better odds.

--Cheers,
--Mike Jr



ATB
Y.Porat
---------------------- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


sorry i take it much seriously!!
it i snot a matter of choice
it is a matter of vital importance
not of my generation but our childrens

(so please dont be as Luis 15 king of of France (!!)
who said
'after me --- the flood ' .............

oil is going to dry one day
the same will coal and the same will be with uranium etc
so actually we have no better choice for the long run
and lpeas re,ember
even a good theoretic solution will be found
it will take many decades to implement it practically
so
the sooner - the better once you really care for future
if you dont we dont have a common language ...

ATB
Y.Porat
-------------------------------------------
  #5  
Old July 8th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
Y.Porat
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,605
Default Nuclear power

On Jul 7, 9:53 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:
On Jul 7, 10:40 am, "Y.Porat" wrote:



On Jul 7, 1:31 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


On Jul 6, 11:20 pm, "Y.Porat" wrote:


On Jul 5, 6:21 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


“Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight -
vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to
the environment and to humanity. The only solution is to halt the
expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing
plants.”http://www.greenpeace.org/internatio...paigns/nuclear


Patrick Moore, one of the founders of Greenpeace, had this to say,
“In the early 1970s when I helped found Greenpeace, I believed that
nuclear energy was synonymous with nuclear holocaust, as did most of
my compatriots. That's the conviction that inspired Greenpeace's first
voyage up the spectacular rocky northwest coast to protest the testing
of U.S. hydrogen bombs in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. Thirty years on,
my views have changed, and the rest of the environmental movement
needs to update its views, too, because nuclear energy may just be the
energy source that can save our planet from another possible disaster:
catastrophic climate change.”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...06/04/14/AR200...


Wind power and solar generation can’t hack it. So what are the
alternatives to nuclear/hydrocarbon power plants?
Brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis
The surest way to a low standard of living is energy poverty


Let us examine the waste balance sheet of a coal-fired vs. a nuclear
power plant.


A 1,000 Megawatt coal-fired power plant produces
solid wastes at a rate of 1,800 pounds per minute that includes
19 toxic metals such as arsenic
carcinogens such as benzopyrene
30 pounds of sulfur dioxide per second
As much nitrous oxide as 200,000 automobiles
50 times the radioactive emissions of an average nuclear power plant
Each (short) ton of coal contains
50 grams of Uranium
129 grams of Thorium


According to NCRP Reports No. 92 and No. 95, population exposure from
the operation of 1000-MWe nuclear and coal-fired power plants amounts
to 490 person-rem/year for coal plants and 4.8 person-rem/year for
nuclear plants. Thus, the population effective dose equivalent from
coal plants is 100 times that from nuclear plants.


Highly radioactive daughter particles amount to 3% (by volume) or
about .2 cubic meters from a year’s production from a 1,000 Megawatt
Light Water Reactor (LWR) power plant.


In that 3% you have the following significant radionuclides with their
half lives.
Gases
Kypton-85 10.7 years
Xenon-133 5.3 days
Solids
Strontium-90 28.1 years
Molybdenum-99 66.7 hours
Iodine-131 8.1 days
Cesium-137 30.2 years
Cerium-144 285.0 days


After 30 half lives a radioactive material is deemed safe. Picking
the longest lived, Cesium-137 at 30.2 years, 30x30.2=906 years.


We are not talking about Yucca Mountain here; that is for wastes from
nuclear weapons production.


What about the remaining 97%? They can be immediately reused as
nuclear fuel. We recycle paper and not nuclear fuel?


In 1977, that gem of a president Jimmy Carter canceled the Barnwell,
South Carolina, reprocessing plant then nearing completion because of
an exaggerated danger of terrorists stealing our nuclear fuel and
chemically separating the plutonium from the uranium in order to build
nuclear weapons with it. They should live so long trying.


France, Germany, Japan, and Russia continued with their reprocessing
facilities and have assured themselves sources of readily available
nuclear fuel for the foreseeable future. I am sure that the terrorist
would never consider stealing from them.~


[Footnote .~ is the emoticon for irony]


My point? Start building nuclear reactors as fast as you can.


--Mike Jr


--------------------
why is no one talking about fusion ???!!!


Fission gets us out of the current oil crunch. Fusion is a longer
range solution.


"Current status


Despite optimism dating back to the 1950s about the wide-scale
harnessing of fusion power, there are still significant barriers
standing between current scientific understanding and technological
capabilities and the practical realization of fusion as an energy
source.[citation needed] Research, while making steady progress, has
also continually thrown up new difficulties.[citation needed]
Therefore it remains unclear that an economically viable fusion plant
is even possible.[16] An editorial in New Scientist magazine opined
that "if commercial fusion is viable, it may well be a century
away."[16] Ironically, a pamphlet printed by General Atomics in 1970's
stated that "By the year 2000, several commercial fusion reactors are
expected to be on-line."


Several fusion reactors have been built, but as yet none has produced
more thermal energy than electrical energy consumed. Despite research
having started in the 1950s, no commercial fusion reactor is expected
before 2050. The ITER project is currently leading the effort to
commercialize fusion power."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_power


--Mike Jr.


Y.Porat
----------------------------------


i cantell you right now
that ITER is leading nowhere
it is a huge waist of mony
and worse waIst of PRECIOUS TIME !!


so now we come to my next point
since you are right that it will take a lot of time
(depends on investments in it )
therefore and just because of that
we must start right now
before later might be too late!
technically
and worse than that - international socially !! (social disaster )


Funding research is a little like betting on race horses. There is an
algorithm for dividing a $100 stake across the horses in a race based
purely on their odds. You reserve about 8% of your stake for the long
shot because occasionally they win and win big.

Fusion is a long shot and 8% of total research is (IMHO) optimistic.

Better to focus your money on horses with better odds.

--Cheers,
--Mike Jr



ATB
Y.Porat
---------------------- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


--------------
i responded to that yet i wonder why it didnt get in
so again shortly:

i am much more serious than you about it

oil coal and even Uranium will drain off

so fusion is the only long term possobility
beside all the ;green sources
now please note that
even if the technological process will be found
its IMPLEMENTATION will take at least decades

so
if you think like Luis 14 king of France that said:
'after me the flood'

i am not with you !!
(after him there was the Gillotin ........)

ATB
Y.Porat
-----------------------------
  #6  
Old July 9th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
zzbunker@netscape.net
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,382
Default Nuclear power

On Jul 7, 2:53*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:
On Jul 7, 10:40*am, "Y.Porat" wrote:





On Jul 7, 1:31*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


On Jul 6, 11:20 pm, "Y.Porat" wrote:


On Jul 5, 6:21 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


“Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight -
vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to
the environment and to humanity. The only solution is to halt the
expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing
plants.”http://www.greenpeace.org/internatio...paigns/nuclear


Patrick Moore, one of the founders of Greenpeace, had this to say,
“In the early 1970s when I helped found Greenpeace, I believed that
nuclear energy was synonymous with nuclear holocaust, as did most of
my compatriots. That's the conviction that inspired Greenpeace's first
voyage up the spectacular rocky northwest coast to protest the testing
of U.S. hydrogen bombs in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. Thirty years on,
my views have changed, and the rest of the environmental movement
needs to update its views, too, because nuclear energy may just be the
energy source that can save our planet from another possible disaster:
catastrophic climate change.”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...06/04/14/AR200...


Wind power and solar generation can’t hack it. *So what are the
alternatives to nuclear/hydrocarbon power plants?
* * * * Brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis
* * * * The surest way to a low standard of living is energy poverty


Let us examine the waste balance sheet of a coal-fired vs. a nuclear
power plant.


A 1,000 Megawatt coal-fired power plant produces
solid wastes at a rate of 1,800 pounds per minute that includes
* * * * * * * * 19 toxic metals such as arsenic
* * * * * * * * carcinogens such as benzopyrene
* * * * 30 pounds of sulfur dioxide per second
* * * * As much nitrous oxide as 200,000 automobiles
* * * * 50 times the radioactive emissions of an average nuclear power plant
* * * * * * * * Each (short) ton of coal contains
* * * * * * * * * * * * 50 grams of Uranium
* * * * * * * * * * * * 129 grams of Thorium


According to NCRP Reports No. 92 and No. 95, population exposure from
the operation of 1000-MWe nuclear and coal-fired power plants amounts
to 490 person-rem/year for coal plants and 4.8 person-rem/year for
nuclear plants. Thus, the population effective dose equivalent from
coal plants is 100 times that from nuclear plants.


Highly radioactive daughter particles amount to 3% (by volume) or
about .2 cubic meters from a year’s production from a 1,000 Megawatt
Light Water Reactor (LWR) power plant.


In that 3% you have the following significant radionuclides with their
half lives.
Gases
* Kypton-85 * * * * * * 10.7 years
* Xenon-133 * * * * * * *5.3 days
Solids
* Strontium-90 * * * * 28.1 years
* Molybdenum-99 * *66.7 hours
* Iodine-131 * * * * * * *8.1 days
* Cesium-137 * * * * *30.2 years
* Cerium-144 * * * * 285.0 days


After 30 half lives a radioactive material is deemed safe. *Picking
the longest lived, Cesium-137 at 30.2 years, 30x30.2=906 years.


We are not talking about Yucca Mountain here; that is for wastes from
nuclear weapons production.


What about the remaining 97%? They can be immediately reused as
nuclear fuel. *We recycle paper and not nuclear fuel?


In 1977, that gem of a president Jimmy Carter canceled the Barnwell,
South Carolina, reprocessing plant then nearing completion because of
an exaggerated danger of terrorists stealing our nuclear fuel and
chemically separating the plutonium from the uranium in order to build
nuclear weapons with it. *They should live so long trying.


France, Germany, Japan, and Russia continued with their reprocessing
facilities and have assured themselves sources of readily available
nuclear fuel for the foreseeable future. I am sure that the terrorist
would never consider stealing from them.~


[Footnote .~ is the emoticon for irony]


My point? *Start building nuclear reactors as fast as you can.


--Mike Jr


--------------------
why is no one talking about fusion ???!!!


Fission gets us out of the current oil crunch. *Fusion is a longer
range solution.


"Current status


Despite optimism dating back to the 1950s about the wide-scale
harnessing of fusion power, there are still significant barriers
standing between current scientific understanding and technological
capabilities and the practical realization of fusion as an energy
source.[citation needed] Research, while making steady progress, has
also continually thrown up new difficulties.[citation needed]
Therefore it remains unclear that an economically viable fusion plant
is even possible.[16] An editorial in New Scientist magazine opined
that "if commercial fusion is viable, it may well be a century
away."[16] Ironically, a pamphlet printed by General Atomics in 1970's
stated that "By the year 2000, several commercial fusion reactors are
expected to be on-line."


Several fusion reactors have been built, but as yet none has produced
more thermal energy than electrical energy consumed. Despite research
having started in the 1950s, no commercial fusion reactor is expected
before 2050. The ITER project is currently leading the effort to
commercialize fusion power."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_power


--Mike Jr.


Y.Porat
----------------------------------


i cantell you right now
that ITER *is leading nowhere
it is a huge waist of mony
and worse *waIst of PRECIOUS TIME *!!


so now we come to my next point
since you are right that it will take a lot of time
(depends on investments in it )
therefore and just because of that
we must start right now
before later might be too late!
technically
and worse than that - international *socially !! (social disaster )


Funding research is a little like betting on race horses. *There is an
algorithm for dividing a $100 stake across the horses in a race based
purely on their odds. *You reserve about 8% of your stake for the long
shot because occasionally they win and win big.

Fusion is a long shot and 8% of total research is (IMHO) optimistic.

Better to focus your money on horses with better odds.


Well, that's why we've telling the physics idiots for years to
bet on Adaptive A.I., PV Cells, Fiber Optics, CD, Turbines.
GPS. Cruise Missiles, Microcomputers, DVD+RW, Laser Pointers,
and Robots.
Since there is no difference between Nuclear Power, Solar Power,
Wind Energy, Fission, and Fusion with idiots like Scientists and
Politicians. They're all just numbers in a book.





--Cheers,
--Mike Jr





ATB
Y.Porat
---------------------- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


  #7  
Old July 9th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
Y.Porat
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,605
Default Nuclear power

On Jul 9, 4:28*am, "
wrote:
On Jul 7, 2:53*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:







On Jul 7, 10:40*am, "Y.Porat" wrote:


On Jul 7, 1:31*pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


On Jul 6, 11:20 pm, "Y.Porat" wrote:


On Jul 5, 6:21 pm, "Mike Jr." wrote:


“Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight -
vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to
the environment and to humanity. The only solution is to halt the
expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing
plants.”http://www.greenpeace.org/internatio...paigns/nuclear


Patrick Moore, one of the founders of Greenpeace, had this to say,
“In the early 1970s when I helped found Greenpeace, I believed that
nuclear energy was synonymous with nuclear holocaust, as did most of
my compatriots. That's the conviction that inspired Greenpeace's first
voyage up the spectacular rocky northwest coast to protest the testing
of U.S. hydrogen bombs in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. Thirty years on,
my views have changed, and the rest of the environmental movement
needs to update its views, too, because nuclear energy may just be the
energy source that can save our planet from another possible disaster:
catastrophic climate change.”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...06/04/14/AR200...


Wind power and solar generation can’t hack it. *So what are the
alternatives to nuclear/hydrocarbon power plants?
* * * * Brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis
* * * * The surest way to a low standard of living is energy poverty


Let us examine the waste balance sheet of a coal-fired vs. a nuclear
power plant.


A 1,000 Megawatt coal-fired power plant produces
solid wastes at a rate of 1,800 pounds per minute that includes
* * * * * * * * 19 toxic metals such as arsenic
* * * * * * * * carcinogens such as benzopyrene
* * * * 30 pounds of sulfur dioxide per second
* * * * As much nitrous oxide as 200,000 automobiles
* * * * 50 times the radioactive emissions of an average nuclear power plant
* * * * * * * * Each (short) ton of coal contains
* * * * * * * * * * * * 50 grams of Uranium
* * * * * * * * * * * * 129 grams of Thorium


According to NCRP Reports No. 92 and No. 95, population exposure from
the operation of 1000-MWe nuclear and coal-fired power plants amounts
to 490 person-rem/year for coal plants and 4.8 person-rem/year for
nuclear plants. Thus, the population effective dose equivalent from
coal plants is 100 times that from nuclear plants.


Highly radioactive daughter particles amount to 3% (by volume) or
about .2 cubic meters from a year’s production from a 1,000 Megawatt
Light Water Reactor (LWR) power plant.


In that 3% you have the following significant radionuclides with their
half lives.
Gases
* Kypton-85 * * * * * * 10.7 years
* Xenon-133 * * * * * * *5.3 days
Solids
* Strontium-90 * * * * 28.1 years
* Molybdenum-99 * *66.7 hours
* Iodine-131 * * * * * * *8.1 days
* Cesium-137 * * * * *30.2 years
* Cerium-144 * * * * 285.0 days


After 30 half lives a radioactive material is deemed safe. *Picking
the longest lived, Cesium-137 at 30.2 years, 30x30.2=906 years.


We are not talking about Yucca Mountain here; that is for wastes from
nuclear weapons production.


What about the remaining 97%? They can be immediately reused as
nuclear fuel. *We recycle paper and not nuclear fuel?


In 1977, that gem of a president Jimmy Carter canceled the Barnwell,
South Carolina, reprocessing plant then nearing completion because of
an exaggerated danger of terrorists stealing our nuclear fuel and
chemically separating the plutonium from the uranium in order to build
nuclear weapons with it. *They should live so long trying.


France, Germany, Japan, and Russia continued with their reprocessing
facilities and have assured themselves sources of readily available
nuclear fuel for the foreseeable future. I am sure that the terrorist
would never consider stealing from them.~


[Footnote .~ is the emoticon for irony]


My point? *Start building nuclear reactors as fast as you can..


--Mike Jr


--------------------
why is no one talking about fusion ???!!!


Fission gets us out of the current oil crunch. *Fusion is a longer
range solution.


"Current status


Despite optimism dating back to the 1950s about the wide-scale
harnessing of fusion power, there are still significant barriers
standing between current scientific understanding and technological
capabilities and the practical realization of fusion as an energy
source.[citation needed] Research, while making steady progress, has
also continually thrown up new difficulties.[citation needed]
Therefore it remains unclear that an economically viable fusion plant
is even possible.[16] An editorial in New Scientist magazine opined
that "if commercial fusion is viable, it may well be a century
away."[16] Ironically, a pamphlet printed by General Atomics in 1970's
stated that "By the year 2000, several commercial fusion reactors are
expected to be on-line."


Several fusion reactors have been built, but as yet none has produced
more thermal energy than electrical energy consumed. Despite research
having started in the 1950s, no commercial fusion reactor is expected
before 2050. The ITER project is currently leading the effort to
commercialize fusion power."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_power


--Mike Jr.


Y.Porat
----------------------------------


i cantell you right now
that ITER *is leading nowhere
it is a huge waist of mony
and worse *waIst of PRECIOUS TIME *!!


so now we come to my next point
since you are right that it will take a lot of time
(depends on investments in it )
therefore and just because of that
we must start right now
before later might be too late!
technically
and worse than that - international *socially !! (social disaster )


Funding research is a little like betting on race horses. *There is an
algorithm for dividing a $100 stake across the horses in a race based
purely on their odds. *You reserve about 8% of your stake for the long
shot because occasionally they win and win big.


Fusion is a long shot and 8% of total research is (IMHO) optimistic.


Better to focus your money on horses with better odds.


* Well, that's why we've telling the physics idiots for years to
* bet on *Adaptive A.I., *PV Cells, Fiber Optics, CD, Turbines.
* GPS. Cruise Missiles, Microcomputers, DVD+RW, *Laser Pointers,
* and Robots.
* Since there is no difference between Nuclear Power, Solar Power,
* Wind Energy, Fission, and Fusion with idiots like Scientists and
* Politicians. They're all just numbers in a book.


-----------------

it seems you are right (:-)

Y.Porat
-----------------------------------


  #8  
Old July 9th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
Charlie Gibbs
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 40
Default Nuclear power

In article ,
(Y.Porat) writes:

i am much more serious than you about it

oil coal and even Uranium will drain off

so fusion is the only long term possobility
beside all the ;green sources
now please note that
even if the technological process will be found
its IMPLEMENTATION will take at least decades


Still, no amount of conservation or alternate energy
will overcome the problems of our ever-increasing population.
Maybe we should worry less about our carbon footprint
and consider that there are simply too many feet.

so
if you think like Luis 14 king of France that said:
'after me the flood'


ObNit: That was Louis XV, not XIV.

i am not with you !!
(after him there was the Gillotin ........)


....and the guillotine got Louis XVI.

All together now, to the tune of Allan Sherman
(starting off vaguely like the Marseillaise):

Louis the Sixteenth was the king of France in 1789.
He was worse than Louis the Fifteenth.
He was worse than Louis the Fourteenth.
He was worse than Louis the Thirteenth.
He was the worst since Louis the First.

--
/~\
lid (Charlie Gibbs)
\ / I'm really at ac.dekanfrus if you read it the right way.
X Top-posted messages will probably be ignored. See RFC1855.
/ \ HTML will DEFINITELY be ignored. Join the ASCII ribbon campaign!

  #10  
Old July 10th 08 posted to sci.physics,sci.physics.fusion,sci.energy
Bernd Felsche[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default Nuclear power

"Charlie Gibbs" wrote:
(Y.Porat) writes:


i am much more serious than you about it


oil coal and even Uranium will drain off


so fusion is the only long term possobility
beside all the ;green sources
now please note that
even if the technological process will be found
its IMPLEMENTATION will take at least decades


Still, no amount of conservation or alternate energy
will overcome the problems of our ever-increasing population.


Populations in developed nations tend to decrease gradually; without
immigration.

Encouraging the development of nations to such a degree that the
natural population growth is near zero to slightly negative is a
desirable objective.

But that doesn't make the anti-development greens very happy.
Perhaps their solution is ritual culling for the sake of Gaia.

The "lack" of fissible materials is not an urgent problem. There is
quite a lot more thorium than uranium around. Both fuels will take
centuries to consume. By which time the global population should be
in natural decline as the fast-breeder nations become fast-food
nations.

Managing fusion or something else as a long-term source of
affordable, abundant energy for civilisation is a worthwhile
objective. Practical realization can only be done safely a step at a
time, while keeping our eyes on the horizon.
--
/"\ Bernd Felsche - Innovative Reckoning, Perth, Western Australia
\ / ASCII ribbon campaign | Science is the belief in
X against HTML mail | the ignorance of the experts.
/ \ and postings | -- Richard Feynman
 




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