The latest Popular Science has an article on an tiny little private outfit in Vancouver Burnaby, BC that's trying to build a mechanical fusion reactor ... it uses an array of 200 precisely synchronized steam-driven pistons to create a contracting spherical shockwave in a ball of molten lead-lithium alloy, which is spinning fast enough to create a void in the center into which deuterium-tritium plasma is injected. It's not continuous fusion — the machine is supposed to complete one fusion cycle per second.
At first, reading the article, I just thought, "Surely this can't work" (though some physicist PopSci talked to says that in principle there's no technical reason it couldn't work). But then it hit me .... it's a steampunk fusion reactor.
Which would make it totally awesome if it DID work ....
Re: It's unfortunately a scam but here's info.
Re: It's unfortunately a scam but here's info.
1) Get some doddering ex-goverment scientist to proclaim you're a miracle.
2) Get lots of media coverage 'sticking' it to OPEC.
3) Write lots of fancy sounding papers.
4) Don't give out solid information.
5) Bounce a lot.
This does much better.
http://wsx.lanl.gov/mtf.html
Re: It's unfortunately a scam but here's info.
But hey, what if it turns out to work? :)
[1] The last I heard about Migma, back around 1985 or so, was an OMNI magazine article that said he was believed to have obtained a massive USAF grant to develop it further and dropped out of sight behind government secrecy; Wikipedia says further development has been stalled since the 80s for lack of funding. Maglich is currently the CEO of HiEnergy Technologies, which produces diagnostic systems and bomb-sniffing technology based on neutron and gamma scattering.