A (now) teenager from
Memphis, Tennessee, might be the youngest person to have built a working fusion
reactor. Jackson Oswalt reported the measurements of his experiment
to the Open Source Fusor Research
Consortium forum, where he got both the inspiration and suggestion
for how to build such a device.
The term nuclear reactor
might evoke images of radioactive material and a huge facility, but the one
built by Oswalt is not like that. It is a fusion reactor, rather than a fission
one that uses uranium to produce electricity. In the fusion reactor, hydrogen
atoms are turned into a plasma and then pushed together until they become
different atoms. In Oswalt’s case, he fused deuterium, a special type of
hydrogen with a neutron and a proton in its nucleus.
“For those that haven't seen my recent posts, it will come as a major surprise that I would even consider believing I had achieved fusion. However, over the past month, I have made an enormous amount of progress resulting from fixing major leaks in my system. I now have results that I believe to be worthy,” Oswalt wrote in a post on February 1, 2018.
The design and construction
of this mini-reactor was not easy or cheap. It took Oswalt roughly a year and
something between $8,000 and $10,000 to get it together and make it work.
Oswalt stated that he achieved fusion on January 19, January 30, and January
31. The fusion of the deuterium atoms led to the release of neutrons – hallmarks
that Oswalt and the Fusor verifiers are interested in spotting.
“You have to jump through the right hoops, and we have to believe you and see what you’ve done,” Richard Hull, a verifier with the research consortium and an administrator for its website, told Fox News.
He regards Oswalt as the
youngest in America and possibly the world to achieve such a feat. The previous
record holder was Taylor Wilson, who achieved nuclear fusion in 2008 when he
was 14. Nuclear fusion is the physical process that powers every star in the
Universe. It also holds the promise for clean, unlimited energy. As Oswalt
demonstrated, we can make fusion happen, but what we are still struggling with
is the ability to have sustained reactions that release more energy than
we put in.
[H/T: Fox
News]
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