- 3193 - NUCLEAR FUSION - an energy source? Fusion is happening in the core of the Sun . It is what keeps us warm and makes our plants grow. In every second, the Sun burns about 600 million tons of hydrogen into about 596 million tons of helium, yielding energy equivalent to trillions of atomic bombs.
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- The Sun is a very powerful energy source created by nature. Because the Sun is 93 million miles from us, only one-billionth of the Sun’s total energy output reaches the Earth. That is what e get to create all of life on Earth.
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- The energy that the Sun gives the Earth’s surface every second is more than the total electricity generated from all power plants in the world in the entire year of 2018.
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- Here on Earth, humans power machines mostly by harvesting energy. “Harvesting” includes the energy of falling water and converting it to electricity in hydroelectric power plants. But to “create energy“, you have to convert matter to energy.
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- One way to do that is to split atoms, the basic building blocks of all matter in the universe. Do so controllably and you can produce a steady flow of energy. Lose control and you release a lot of energy all at once in a nuclear explosion.
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- The core of every atom, the nucleus, is made up of even smaller particles, protons and neutrons. The force holding the nucleus together stores a huge amount of energy. To obtain energy from the nucleus, scientists came up with a process of splitting a heavy atom into lighter atoms.
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- Because the lighter atoms don’t need as much energy to hold the nucleus together as the heavy atoms, extra energy is released as heat or light. This process is called “nuclear fission“.
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- When one atom is split, a ‘chain reaction” starts. The split atom will trigger another atom to be split, and so on. To make the chain reaction controllable, scientists developed ways to slow down the splitting, such as absorbing some of the split particles.
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- Nuclear power plants harvest the energy released by splitting atoms controllably. The world’s largest nuclear power plant is the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Station in Japan. It consists of seven nuclear reactors, with a maximum capacity of about 8,000 megawatts.
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- The world’s largest single nuclear reactor is a tie between the two reactors at China’s Taishan Nuclear Power Plant. Each Taishan reactor has a capacity of 1,750 megawatts.
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- Nuclear power plants use nuclear reactions to heat water to produce steam that drives turbines that in turn drive generators that produce electricity.
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- This amount of power is much smaller than uncontrolled nuclear reactions, such as atomic bombs. Nowadays, the energy output from detonating an atomic bomb is equivalent to the electricity the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant generates in half a year.
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- A downside of nuclear fission is nuclear waste. The “split atoms” are usually unstable and emit dangerous radiation. Nuclear waste needs to be stored properly for many years.
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- Another type of nuclear reaction is one that produces energy without nuclear waste. As two lighter atoms combine into a heavy atom, the lost mass converts into energy. This process is “nuclear fusion“. Fusion not Fission!
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- Fusion is happening in the core of the Sun. In every second, the Sun burns about 600 million tons of hydrogen into about 596 million tons of helium. That 4 million tons difference is converted directly into energy yielding energy equivalent to trillions of atomic bombs.
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- Easy for the Sun but it is very difficult to achieve nuclear fusion on Earth. Fusion happens only at extreme conditions, such as the very high temperatures and pressure of the Sun.
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- Scientists have yet to effectively demonstrate controllable nuclear fusion that produces more energy than it consumes, but they are working hard to do so. One way is to shoot high-power lasers from different directions at a tiny speck of hydrogen isotopes.
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- Nuclear fusion energy would be a promising energy solution in the future. But don’t forget, we have a huge nuclear fusion reactor above our heads, the Sun.
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- With the improving efficiency of solar energy, we don’t even need to create energy, just capture more of what the Sun gives us every day.
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--------------------- Dozens of other reviews are available upon request:
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- 2857 - NUCLEAR FUSION - what is happening with nuclear energy? Fission reactors have been shut down because of the problems with disposing of the radioactive waste. Fusion reactors solve this problem. These reactors split water into hydrogen and oxygen to get hydrogen for fuel and releasing oxygen into the atmosphere which is a good thing.
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- This review lists 12 more reviews about nuclear energy.
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- June 17, 2021 NUCLEAR FUSION - an energy source? 3193
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