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Home > Archive > Electrical Engineering > May 2007 > Nuclear Fusion: My Laseronic PC Dream
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Nuclear Fusion: My Laseronic PC Dream
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| Radium 2007-05-13, 5:25 pm |
| On May 13, 7:24 am, phil-news-nos...@ipal.net wrote in
http://groups.google.com/group/aus....cd8cc566?hl=en&
:
> I suggest you would spend your time better by building a computer that
> runs entirely on photons from light. Be sure it can handle a wide range
> of photon energy levels (wavelengths). If you can fabricate picogates
> that can operate entirely by holding a single photon in state and switch
> the next photon based on a held photon, then you may well have achieved
> the elusive 100% energy efficiency. Holding a photon would be the big
> trick (they prefer to move very fast, so you will have to fool it and
> run it around in a circle or bounce it back and forth).
A photonic PC is one of my dreams. My dream photonic PC runs purely on
400 nm lasers [and other optical equipment - such as (but not limited
to) crystals, lenses, and mirrors, etc, etc.] and does not require any
electricity [other than the changes in electron energy levels that are
mathematically-required to produce any kind of light]. In addition,
this PC does not use any LEDs, just lasers. This PC runs on nanoscopic
400nm lasers that are powered by the main 400 nm laser [power supply].
The ultimate power supply for this main laser is a distant gigawatt
400 nm laser [at the power station] pumped by deuterium-tritium
fusion. The D-T fusion is initiated by another 400 nm laser pumped by,
well, whatever the practical source is. Lasers with sufficiently high-
wattage and short-enough wavelengths can be used to trigger
thermonuclear reactions.
Read more about my laseronic fusion power dreams:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci....565e1275535bb2/
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| The Great Attractor 2007-05-13, 5:25 pm |
| On 13 May 2007 12:22:48 -0700, Radium <glucegen1@gmail.com> wrote:
>Read more about my laseronic fusion power dreams:
No thanks.
You appeal has been denied, like you knew it would be.
| |
| The Great Attractor 2007-05-13, 5:25 pm |
| On Sun, 13 May 2007 14:58:49 -0700, Uncle Al <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net>
wrote:
>Uncle Al
>http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
Hey Al. LTNS. Did your experiment results ever get compiled?
| |
| Eric Gisse 2007-05-13, 8:25 pm |
| On May 13, 12:22 pm, Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote:
[...]
I have been told you are autistic.
I think you are stupid.
Could you tell us which is correct?
| |
| Tzortzakakis Dimitrios 2007-05-14, 1:25 pm |
|
? "Radium" <glucegen1@gmail.com> ?????? ??? ??????
news:1179084168.519878.222270@h2g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
> On May 13, 7:24 am, phil-news-nos...@ipal.net wrote in
> http://groups.google.com/group/aus....cd8cc566?hl=en&
> :
>
>
> A photonic PC is one of my dreams. My dream photonic PC runs purely on
> 400 nm lasers [and other optical equipment - such as (but not limited
> to) crystals, lenses, and mirrors, etc, etc.] and does not require any
> electricity [other than the changes in electron energy levels that are
> mathematically-required to produce any kind of light]. In addition,
> this PC does not use any LEDs, just lasers. This PC runs on nanoscopic
> 400nm lasers that are powered by the main 400 nm laser [power supply].
> The ultimate power supply for this main laser is a distant gigawatt
> 400 nm laser [at the power station] pumped by deuterium-tritium
> fusion. The D-T fusion is initiated by another 400 nm laser pumped by,
> well, whatever the practical source is. Lasers with sufficiently high-
> wattage and short-enough wavelengths can be used to trigger
> thermonuclear reactions.
>
> Read more about my laseronic fusion power dreams:
>
>
http://groups.google.com/group/sci....b565e1275535bb2
/
>
Well, nobody knows what the future will bring.For example, in the '80s
people believed that in the future cars would fly, there would be colonies
in the moon and the like.Nobody expected mobile phones, the internet,
digital cameras, dvds recordable cds, the fall of the iron curtain,etc
etc.Since none of us is omniscient, we can only make assumptions.
--
Tzortzakakis Dimitrios
major in electrical engineering
mechanized infantry reservist
dimtzort AT otenet DOT gr
| |
| phil-news-nospam@ipal.net 2007-05-14, 5:25 pm |
| On Mon, 14 May 2007 18:23:25 +0300 Tzortzakakis Dimitrios <nowhere@noone.com> wrote:
|
| ? "Radium" <glucegen1@gmail.com> ?????? ??? ??????
| news:1179084168.519878.222270@h2g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
|> On May 13, 7:24 am, phil-news-nos...@ipal.net wrote in
|> http://groups.google.com/group/aus....cd8cc566?hl=en&
|> :
|>
|> > I suggest you would spend your time better by building a computer that
|> > runs entirely on photons from light. Be sure it can handle a wide range
|> > of photon energy levels (wavelengths). If you can fabricate picogates
|> > that can operate entirely by holding a single photon in state and switch
|> > the next photon based on a held photon, then you may well have achieved
|> > the elusive 100% energy efficiency. Holding a photon would be the big
|> > trick (they prefer to move very fast, so you will have to fool it and
|> > run it around in a circle or bounce it back and forth).
|>
|> A photonic PC is one of my dreams. My dream photonic PC runs purely on
|> 400 nm lasers [and other optical equipment - such as (but not limited
|> to) crystals, lenses, and mirrors, etc, etc.] and does not require any
|> electricity [other than the changes in electron energy levels that are
|> mathematically-required to produce any kind of light]. In addition,
|> this PC does not use any LEDs, just lasers. This PC runs on nanoscopic
|> 400nm lasers that are powered by the main 400 nm laser [power supply].
|> The ultimate power supply for this main laser is a distant gigawatt
|> 400 nm laser [at the power station] pumped by deuterium-tritium
|> fusion. The D-T fusion is initiated by another 400 nm laser pumped by,
|> well, whatever the practical source is. Lasers with sufficiently high-
|> wattage and short-enough wavelengths can be used to trigger
|> thermonuclear reactions.
|>
|> Read more about my laseronic fusion power dreams:
|>
|>
| http://groups.google.com/group/sci....b565e1275535bb2
| /
|>
| Well, nobody knows what the future will bring.For example, in the '80s
| people believed that in the future cars would fly, there would be colonies
| in the moon and the like.Nobody expected mobile phones, the internet,
| digital cameras, dvds recordable cds, the fall of the iron curtain,etc
| etc.Since none of us is omniscient, we can only make assumptions.
People _had_ mobiles phones as early as the 1950's. They were big clunky
things that took a lot of space in the car. Certainly not portable and
certainly not useful some distance from the service that provided it. But
they did exist. The milestones were making the phones operate on a cellular
topology with handoff to the next transmitter when moving, and then making
them small enough to carry and use in one hand.
Digital cameras existed, too. They were just variations of TV cameras.
And I was on the internet in 1986. Some people were there long before I.
--
|---------------------------------------/----------------------------------|
| Phil Howard KA9WGN (ka9wgn.ham.org) / Do not send to the address below |
| first name lower case at ipal.net / spamtrap-2007-05-14-1346@ipal.net |
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