Episode #485 from 18:28
Is nuclear fusion safe?
...fundamentally as a source of energy. In fusion, you're taking these lightweight isotopes, you're bringing them together, you're releasing energy, and that energy is in the form of charged particles. It's already in the form of electricity. Fusion itself has electricity built into it without a lot of the steam or thermal system requirements. That's a really nice fundamental benefit of fusion itself. Also, this reaction that's really hard to do turns itself off, so you end up with fusion being fundamentally safe, and that's really a key requirement of any industrial system, is that it turns itself off and is safe. You turn the key off on your car, you know it's going to turn off. I guess the flip side of that, just stating the obvious, but it's nice to lay it out. For nuclear fission, it's a chain reaction, so it's hard to shut off, and it works by boiling water into steam, which spins turbines and produces electricity. Can you talk through this process in a nuclear fission reactor?
Why this moment matters
...fundamentally as a source of energy. In fusion, you're taking these lightweight isotopes, you're bringing them together, you're releasing energy, and that energy is in the form of charged particles. It's already in the form of electricity. Fusion itself has electricity built into it without a lot of the steam or thermal system requirements. That's a really nice fundamental benefit of fusion itself. Also, this reaction that's really hard to do turns itself off, so you end up with fusion being fundamentally safe, and that's really a key requirement of any industrial system, is that it turns itself off and is safe. You turn the key off on your car, you know it's going to turn off. I guess the flip side of that, just stating the obvious, but it's nice to lay it out. For nuclear fission, it's a chain reaction, so it's hard to shut off, and it works by boiling water into steam, which spins turbines and produces electricity. Can you talk through this process in a nuclear fission reactor?