- Joined
- 18 Feb 2007
- Messages
- 1,367
- Reaction score
- 77
- Country
I watched the Horizon program on BBC last night. Its subject was material science.
One feature was that of one of the astronaughts who landed on the Moon had determined that there was evidence of Helium trapped in the rocks of the moon. He had set up a company to eventually harvest this Helium as the element was scarce on Earth and Helium was a prized element required for the eventual Fusion program for energy production, (whenever that problem resolution may be).
My problem is this. My university physics of the 70's was that the fusion process was that of the fusion of the first isotope of Hydrogen, Deuterium, which PRODUCED Helium. Therefore Helium is a stable by-product of the fusion process NOT a requirement for it. Deuterium is in almost limitless supply in the oceans of the world and as such whenever the Fusion problem is cracked, the material to to supply it is readily available.
SO what on earth is the BBC claiming that this astronaught is wanting to bring Helium which is a by-product of the fusion process from the moon and not a requirement for it. My understanding was that the fusion process will produce helium which we will have to dispose of somehow.
Has the fundamental science of fusion changed in the last 40 years and I have missed the revelation or has the BBC and this astronaught got it all wrong by wanting to import Helium when in fact we would want to dispose of it IF man made fusion ever happens.
My understanding of the fusion process was rather confirmed in the program by the suggestion that the helium arrived on the Moon from the Sun and carried on the Solar wind and as the Moon has no atmosphere or magnetic field the Helium arrived at the Moon surface but could not get to the Earths surface due to atmosphere and magnetic field. As the source of helium from the Moon is a direct result of Fusion then surely the BBC and the astronaughts reasoning is Wrong.
I am sure Joe 90 can put me right here.
One feature was that of one of the astronaughts who landed on the Moon had determined that there was evidence of Helium trapped in the rocks of the moon. He had set up a company to eventually harvest this Helium as the element was scarce on Earth and Helium was a prized element required for the eventual Fusion program for energy production, (whenever that problem resolution may be).
My problem is this. My university physics of the 70's was that the fusion process was that of the fusion of the first isotope of Hydrogen, Deuterium, which PRODUCED Helium. Therefore Helium is a stable by-product of the fusion process NOT a requirement for it. Deuterium is in almost limitless supply in the oceans of the world and as such whenever the Fusion problem is cracked, the material to to supply it is readily available.
SO what on earth is the BBC claiming that this astronaught is wanting to bring Helium which is a by-product of the fusion process from the moon and not a requirement for it. My understanding was that the fusion process will produce helium which we will have to dispose of somehow.
Has the fundamental science of fusion changed in the last 40 years and I have missed the revelation or has the BBC and this astronaught got it all wrong by wanting to import Helium when in fact we would want to dispose of it IF man made fusion ever happens.
My understanding of the fusion process was rather confirmed in the program by the suggestion that the helium arrived on the Moon from the Sun and carried on the Solar wind and as the Moon has no atmosphere or magnetic field the Helium arrived at the Moon surface but could not get to the Earths surface due to atmosphere and magnetic field. As the source of helium from the Moon is a direct result of Fusion then surely the BBC and the astronaughts reasoning is Wrong.
I am sure Joe 90 can put me right here.