Nuclear Fusion Breakthrough; Powering Electric Vehicles; Carbon Capture | 60 Minutes Full Episodes

Ғылым және технология

Scott Pelley's January report on the breakthrough in nuclear fusion made by scientists at the National Ignition Facility; From May, Bill Whitaker's story on how companies are developing lithium extraction for electric car batteries in California’s Imperial Valley. And from April, Whitaker's visit to Iceland, where carbon dioxide is captured from the air and buried underground as part of groundbreaking new technology to slow climate change.
#nuclearfusion #science #technology
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0:00 Introduction
0:11 Star Power
13:17 Lithium Valley
26:27 Out of Thin Air

Пікірлер: 3 600

  • @georgekraus9357
    @georgekraus935715 күн бұрын

    The perfection of the target sphere reminded me of the struggle that Los Alamos team worked on back in WWII, in the development of implosion fusion.

  • @edschultheis9537
    @edschultheis95379 ай бұрын

    As a mechanical engineer, I did my small part in the design of this massive project in 1998 (25 years ago now). I designed all of the square-ish louver-like panels (shown in the background) on the inside of the large sphere shown at 2:31. There were about 250 panels. No two panels were alike. It was an interesting project. It is great to see that this project is beginning to fulfill its original purpose. This NIF project has two main objectives. #1) It is used to verify the effectiveness of the US nuclear weapons stockpile (so that we don't have to do actual nuclear testing in the Nevada desert anymore). #2) It is used to do fusion energy research for the (hopefully) eventual construction of nuclear fusion-powered power plants.

  • @ExclusivelyC4

    @ExclusivelyC4

    9 ай бұрын

    That’s pretty cool to be a part of something like this. I’m a mechanical engineering student any tips?

  • @Cauthon75

    @Cauthon75

    5 ай бұрын

    We made some of the piezoelectric parts for focusing the mirrors - in Massachusetts, all the way across the country from CA. It takes a lot of work by lots of people to get something like that going. Those who can, do; those who can not, sit around and complain about those who do - such as, why did we get paid for doing things :-)

  • @Cauthon75

    @Cauthon75

    5 ай бұрын

    Be in the right place at the right time, like Forrest Gump. :-) @@ExclusivelyC4

  • @BumKnuckle

    @BumKnuckle

    4 ай бұрын

    Your contribution is very much appreciated!

  • @Yomi4D

    @Yomi4D

    2 ай бұрын

    Kudos Sir

  • @gavinlew8273
    @gavinlew82738 ай бұрын

    60 minutes has been serving incredible interviews without the hype. I love how Scott's witty and sharp questions dissect the topic so flawlessly.

  • @Brad_Fallon

    @Brad_Fallon

    5 ай бұрын

    LOL

  • @jimthvac100

    @jimthvac100

    15 күн бұрын

    Sure except they are completely full of sh_t and biased towards Marxism when it comes to reporting any news related to politics. Years ago I liked 60 minutes. Not anymore

  • @damageincorporatedmetal43v73

    @damageincorporatedmetal43v73

    14 күн бұрын

    It's not a question any more, I made it up this hill. He was Hindu Yea so we made it to our destination...🤔

  • @rsc4peace971
    @rsc4peace97115 күн бұрын

    I have been a big follower of 60 Minutes for over 30 years and am glad to see they still keep a high standard in flushing out contemporary topics that are relevant to all of us. Of the 3 big topics I think the only one that has a high chance of success in the next decade is the Li extraction in the CA. The other two are at least 2 decades or more to be practical impact

  • @dominicbritt
    @dominicbritt9 ай бұрын

    When you fully appreciate the effort required to establish ignition, you start to realise how far away Fusion power is...

  • @johnnysifuentes4188

    @johnnysifuentes4188

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah but history tells us its right around the corner, maybe not our corner, but soon, in the landscape of world history.

  • @Studio23Media

    @Studio23Media

    9 ай бұрын

    It's soooooo much closer to reality than it was a year ago though.

  • @Eyedunno

    @Eyedunno

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Studio23Media Not really, or at least not thanks to this "breakthrough". The approach the NIF took would be absolutely absurd for putting power on the grid. ITER is much more likely to contribute useful science.

  • @AlJay0032

    @AlJay0032

    9 ай бұрын

    Doing fusion is easy, just take a hydrogen bomb.

  • @checktheevidence

    @checktheevidence

    9 ай бұрын

    Viable hot fusion power stations have always been 20 years in the future - since the mid-1950s. You might want to study and learn the connections between "cold fusion" and the events of 9/11 to understand why we are forced to use either fossil fuels or not-really-renewable energy systems now. It's serious.

  • @bwake
    @bwake9 ай бұрын

    If it doesn’t look practical, take comfort in the fact that nuclear physicists don’t design things for efficiency and practicality. That’s the job for engineers.

  • @yourlogicalnightmare1014

    @yourlogicalnightmare1014

    9 ай бұрын

    I get most of my comfort from seeing the word "breakthrough" in millions of articles in dozens of scientific journals and realizing none of them have ever led to a commercial product

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    9 ай бұрын

    I get confort by choosing a bicycle over a car or a plane... "unfortunately", I do have to take a train occasionally.

  • @chrishartz2397

    @chrishartz2397

    9 ай бұрын

    Exactly…

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244

    @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244

    9 ай бұрын

    Physicists are first of all engineers.

  • @tetrabromobisphenol

    @tetrabromobisphenol

    9 ай бұрын

    Like most people with ZERO knowledge of the subject, you falsely assume that engineers haven't been involved from the beginning. This is a tool to probe plasma physics for nuclear weapons. They just used this event as a PR kick to get more funding but it will NEVER be a practical means of power production and it was never intended to do so. The Holhraums alone cost about $100k apiece to make, and store a few pennies' worth of energy. Economics will never favor this approach, ever, even if all of the technical issues disappeared.

  • @corujariousa
    @corujariousa17 күн бұрын

    Fusion power is one of those unicorns we keep looking for. We can't yet sustain a reaction for not even 1 sec. The goal is worth it. Only if I can be lucky enough to see it happening in my lifetime...

  • @sicdavid6292
    @sicdavid62929 ай бұрын

    After dozens of breakthroughs we are still decades away.

  • @williesreserve7475

    @williesreserve7475

    8 ай бұрын

    shooting a f ton of lasers at something with giant capacitors is a breakthrough?? this is shlt they where doing 60 years ago. this is a scam

  • @HarutHarutyunyan-tp6mi

    @HarutHarutyunyan-tp6mi

    2 ай бұрын

    Us

  • @HarutHarutyunyan-tp6mi

    @HarutHarutyunyan-tp6mi

    2 ай бұрын

    😊😅

  • @HarutHarutyunyan-tp6mi

    @HarutHarutyunyan-tp6mi

    2 ай бұрын

    😢

  • @GenghisKhan311

    @GenghisKhan311

    Ай бұрын

    Centuries

  • @seventhson27
    @seventhson279 ай бұрын

    We have been "Twenty years away" from Fusion reaction for the last 40 YEARS.

  • @Shorkshire

    @Shorkshire

    9 ай бұрын

    And yet this is the first time we've actually achieved ignition so

  • @B01

    @B01

    9 ай бұрын

    Greatest advancement in humankind: "bro hurry up!"

  • @trentallman984

    @trentallman984

    9 ай бұрын

    Now we are 15 years away.

  • @scomo532

    @scomo532

    9 ай бұрын

    Fusion power is like Mexico, it’s great to talk about, especially on “60 Minutes of BS” and each will always have a bright future.

  • @thothheartmaat2833

    @thothheartmaat2833

    9 ай бұрын

    tomorrow never comes.. its always tomorrow..

  • @DaveBoxBG
    @DaveBoxBG9 ай бұрын

    The good thing about lithium is that we need finite amount unlike oil. Oil is burned away forever, lithium is only stored in the batteries it does not evaporate or dispensary in any way so at some point it will only be recycled over and over again with almost 0 new sourcing.

  • @scottski51
    @scottski513 күн бұрын

    I love the optimism of all who were featured. It's really cute and endearing! I can hear them walking the hallways, quietly whispering.... "I think we can, I think we can, I think we can!"

  • @pilotusa
    @pilotusa9 ай бұрын

    In the late 1970s, I asked a Fermilab scientist when to expect commercial fusion power generation. He said it was 25 years away. Watching its progress, I find it is ALWAYS 25 years away. It likely still is and might always be 25 years away. On another note, does anyone really believe that the potential financial windfall for the lithium mining at the Salton Sea willl actually benefit the impoverished community already there? The companies will take the money and suck it to the top of their company management, some of which, it seems, will soon be in Australia.

  • @luciesuevas9534

    @luciesuevas9534

    9 ай бұрын

    Coming from a person who's hometown in Arizona started improving after an electric car company came in, I would say yes. The lithium mining at the Salton Sea will most likely benefit the community there. People will be needed to operate this plant, so they'll probably hire specialists to relocate/work there as well as hire locals for everything a specialist wouldn't be needed to do (labor). So, there'll be more people going into the Salton Sea area and more locals with a reason to stay. The benefits of having this plant come into that town specifically won't be on some grand scale, unless more attractions are created, but it will be something. Having a large company roll into a city that's otherwise completely unknown, really boosts moral for those who live there and it will create new jobs for the locals, even if the company is profiting much more than them.

  • @tinkeringinthailand8147

    @tinkeringinthailand8147

    8 ай бұрын

    "Money". The only other dirty words I know that come before it is; "Profit" and "Greed", and the effect of these words turns into such words as "Envy" and "Hatred". A good direction for our kids?

  • @orionpixie3852

    @orionpixie3852

    8 ай бұрын

    very insightful, although fusion power is closer than we imagine and at a commercially scalable level too.. I completely agree about the uneven distribution of economic benefits from any major project etc. The masses will still benefit but not as much as some of the top tier population, especially a sector like mining where corruption is difficult to trace and curb it will be more palpable.

  • @Arturo-lapaz

    @Arturo-lapaz

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@luciesuevas9534 Yes, but the more people involved are there the more expensive the lithium ends up and cannot compete with other sources . Besides batteries without lithium, with much higher energy density are in the works now, so this whole effort may fizzle away... Typical worn out 60 minutes story, worth 60 seconds .

  • @artlewellan2294

    @artlewellan2294

    8 ай бұрын

    Nuclear (pronounced new-klee-ur) power, like all centralized power systems, requires long-distance transmission lines connected to complex regional utility grids, both of which remain vulnerable to power outage. State of the art power is rooftop solar 'matched' to small battery BEV and PHEV plug-in hybrid vehicles in the garage or carport connected to neighborhood minigrids. Tell 60 minutes about it though their corporate board of directors already know and don't care.

  • @GroovyVideo2
    @GroovyVideo29 ай бұрын

    powering my whole house with fusion power for 5 years - Solar Panels

  • @Douglas-Murad

    @Douglas-Murad

    9 ай бұрын

    Until it accidently explodes, and your whole house is gone.

  • @murrmurr765

    @murrmurr765

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@Douglas-MuradThe sun is dying in billions of years buddy. You'd be better off worrying about your own imminent death! That's what I do! It works out great for me.

  • @Douglas-Murad

    @Douglas-Murad

    9 ай бұрын

    @@murrmurr765 We are talking about small nuclear powered sources, which you can have in your house, for electricity! Not the sun itself.

  • @scottielambert9312

    @scottielambert9312

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@Douglas-Muradmight be the most head scratching comment ive ever read.

  • @michaelvstheworld3680

    @michaelvstheworld3680

    9 ай бұрын

    What was your monthly electric bill prior? What was the total cost to get your house off the grid? Have you made your money back in cost savings yet?

  • @bigkahuna678
    @bigkahuna6788 ай бұрын

    My father worked on the initial efforts to develop fusion energy in a project that was sponsored by the University of Rochester . At that time he was on loan from Kodak after a long career in aerospace. He personally showed me the project which featured about 10 laser tubes the length of a basketball court . As the beams travelled through the tubes they were amplified by water-cooled flash lamps and aimed at a stainless steel sphere wherein the target pellet was supposed to go fusion . My dad estimated that this power source would be viable in about 40 years. It’s been much longer than that to be a reality. Yet technology marches on……

  • @Muonium1

    @Muonium1

    6 ай бұрын

    I am impressed with the accuracy and detail of your recollection. I work at the facility you are describing and when you would have seen it in the 80s it was still the 24 beam system which could deliver about 2kilojoules of light to a target. It was upgraded in the 90s to the current 60 beam system which does about 30kJ on target and produces maximum fusion yields of around 10^14 neutrons per shot. In the mid 2000s we added a second laser system to the first which can simultaneously deliver a 2 petawatt pulse of light to the target. If you're feeling nostalgic, you can see the state of the system when you last observed it in a documentary on my page narrated by Neil Armstrong. We're an unclassified facility and still conduct tours for the public if you want to visit. The whole place is probably about 5 times larger than when you saw it last.

  • @johnnyaxe2004

    @johnnyaxe2004

    5 ай бұрын

    I was absolutely fascinated by this story..anytime a life changing or generational changing discovery is made I am intrigued..especially when the scientists claim they can make an explosion that as hot as the center of the sun!! the little 'bullet' they make to power the whole thing is amazing in and of itself! and then glued with an eyelash?? omg!! then polished 100x smoother than a mirror..and its smaller than a BB and filled with hydrogen at some ridiculously low temperature..and then 190 lasers as long as a football field will combine their energy to fire at that 'bullet'..I was honestly surprised the thing that held the BB was still intact somewhat..you would think at temperatures never achieved before in mankind would just evaporate everything it came into contact with..that kind of confused me but I am still in awe at the overall magnitude of what these amazing scientists are trying to achieve..they tried and failed for 13 years..talk about perseverance!!! what also caught my attention was both your response and bigkahuna's..I live in the Finger Lakes area, Geneva specifically, and travel and work in Rochester regularly..it's an amazing city rich in science and research history..the affect Kodak had on Rochester and then the entire world is just mind boggling..I am not surprised they had their hands in scientific experimentation..I attended RIT in the mid 80s as a math major and have always been fascinated with science and the amazing accomplishments that have happened..especially the last 10 years or so..I would LOVE to visit this facility you speak of!! whereabouts in Rochester is it located?

  • @franklinauguste415

    @franklinauguste415

    4 ай бұрын

    This is such and amazing story .this made my day .

  • @Muonium1

    @Muonium1

    4 ай бұрын

    @@johnnyaxe2004 it's at the UofR

  • @procrastinateXrok
    @procrastinateXrok7 ай бұрын

    Absolutely fantastic, been following this for years so glad actual progress was made

  • @deanle604

    @deanle604

    3 ай бұрын

    It’s will destroy our environment

  • @JaneDoe-ql7sc
    @JaneDoe-ql7sc9 ай бұрын

    The gentleman narrator is excellent, speaking clearly & calmly in his nice warm voice

  • @rob1248996

    @rob1248996

    9 ай бұрын

    It's called propaganda.

  • @yourlogicalnightmare1014

    @yourlogicalnightmare1014

    9 ай бұрын

    And every 60 minutes host will be long dead and buried before we see the fruits of what they stupidly call a "breakthrough"

  • @lemmon.pngpablo1450

    @lemmon.pngpablo1450

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rob1248996i think propaganda would be the opposite, like bias statements on news channels… or almost any statement…

  • @LetsGetBlazedinAZ

    @LetsGetBlazedinAZ

    9 ай бұрын

    She identifies as a woman actually

  • @rob1248996

    @rob1248996

    9 ай бұрын

    @@lemmon.pngpablo1450 Designed to keep the money flowing into the already massive useless jobs program.

  • @CommonCentsRob
    @CommonCentsRob8 ай бұрын

    36:00 In order to sequester CO2 like Iceland you have to have huge basalt areas so you can geo-lock it. Not always possible. I think making oil would be a good use of it. As far as fusion is concerned, "it will always be 20 years away" until some new physics is found making it a possibility of actually happening.

  • @dan6151
    @dan61519 ай бұрын

    There's a fusion breakthrough every 6 months, yet the advent of fusion energy is always 30 years away.

  • @farbeyondsane2529

    @farbeyondsane2529

    9 ай бұрын

    Congrats on learning how progress is made.

  • @joekuhn2220

    @joekuhn2220

    9 ай бұрын

    But not we have AI too. Let alone quantum computing breakthroughs. Progress should definitely be accelerated.

  • @patclark2186

    @patclark2186

    9 ай бұрын

    Not only is it as far away as it was 30 years ago. But. 30 years ago they told us fusion would be so cheap it would be essentially free. No one is talking about how much it will cost anymore. So will probably be unaffordable.

  • @hedf

    @hedf

    9 ай бұрын

    Lets hope AI can do the science before the decade is over

  • @callmethreeone

    @callmethreeone

    9 ай бұрын

    It's interesting how many people lack an understanding of history.

  • @billcullen616
    @billcullen6168 ай бұрын

    At the beginning, 60 Minutes says atomic bombs are uncontrolled fusion. Have we forgotten they are based on fission? Splitting the atom - an entirely different process.

  • @notahotshot
    @notahotshot9 ай бұрын

    I guess I'll be the one to say it, fusion energy has been 20 years away for the past 60 years.

  • @SurelyYewJest

    @SurelyYewJest

    9 ай бұрын

    Hadn't heard that one myself but we're closer than ever so don't confuse the excitement and enthusiasm of physicists with timelines. The science is also evolving faster than it ever has. In the mean time, I'm taking some solace in the fact that fission power is becoming viable again now that people are seeing some seas warming over 100 F.

  • @inkikyo76

    @inkikyo76

    9 ай бұрын

    AI, once it develops a little more, is going to acccelerate breakthroughs like this at a mind-numbing pace. Once they are self-learning and the singularity is reached, many of the issues that humans have been stuck on will be solved at an uncomfortable speed.

  • @ncdave4life

    @ncdave4life

    9 ай бұрын

    I expect that 20 years from now, fusion energy will be only 20 years away. (I'd love to be wrong.)

  • @schloops8473

    @schloops8473

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ncdave4life I'd love you to be wrong too but I doubt it. It's clear they are pretending to have massive breakthroughs but in reality, it's going nowhere

  • @HansLiu23

    @HansLiu23

    9 ай бұрын

    @@SurelyYewJest common joke that it's always a couple decades away.

  • @michaeld5888
    @michaeld58889 ай бұрын

    There is nothing as ephemeral as a youtube breakthrough.

  • @luckyu521
    @luckyu5218 ай бұрын

    These are the celebrities the world should admire

  • @pwisc2115
    @pwisc21157 ай бұрын

    Really impressive stuff and goose bumps at the same time how the new era of energy is almost here. But mainly and ultra importan a clean one. 😍👏🏼

  • @benbohannon
    @benbohannon9 ай бұрын

    I’m not looking for fusion. Just enough energy to stay awake till 10:00pm.

  • @Hokua888
    @Hokua8889 ай бұрын

    Out of the 1,440 minutes of the day this is a really neat and cool sixty. Thank you.

  • @curranhouse
    @curranhouse9 ай бұрын

    "It's why they use keys... " leaves keys on the keyhole 😂😂😂

  • @michaelpaige3398
    @michaelpaige33989 ай бұрын

    How is the heat created by fusion controlled for an extended period of time? I would like to see a device that can contain a million degree process. How long can the lab sustain fusion? Is this process practical?

  • @snaplash
    @snaplash9 ай бұрын

    Two units of laser energy went in to get the 3 out, but far more energy was used to power the inefficient lasers.

  • @ashleyobrien4937
    @ashleyobrien49379 ай бұрын

    There are two main approaches to fusion: this one, and the other one that is actually more realistic and further along , plasma confinement using superconductors for producing electromagnetic fields, the TOKAMAK design is basically a donut of super dense magnetic fields compressing the fuel to a ionized plasma, which is conductive, that helps to compress it even further, and they also mess around with injecting microwaves energy into that as well. ITER is going to work, the confidence is high now, so high that they have got the richest countries on the planet to foot the bill for the building of the demonstrator plant, basically it will help iron out the quirks of controlling an ionized fusing plasma, when this is done, humanity will change in ways none of us can imagine, we are talking limitless power, abundance of everything, a whole new level of existence for the entire planet, and of course the key to spreading to other solar systems etc.

  • @pukcip83

    @pukcip83

    8 ай бұрын

    it all sounds nice in theory, but theres still so many problems with no solution in sight. im more convinced that our current civilisation wont live long enough to profit of fusion energy.

  • @Adam-nw1vy

    @Adam-nw1vy

    8 ай бұрын

    @@pukcip83 AI is a game changer. If it's aligned, it will take care of all of these hurdles in no time.

  • @androwaydie4081

    @androwaydie4081

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@Adam-nw1vyAI fanatics are a frightening sight.

  • @Adam-nw1vy

    @Adam-nw1vy

    8 ай бұрын

    @@androwaydie4081 KZread know-it-all's are such an embarrassment.

  • @johnrhodes3350

    @johnrhodes3350

    7 ай бұрын

    There are other types as well 😮

  • @brianbrewster6532
    @brianbrewster65328 ай бұрын

    Thanks you 60 Minutes for dumming down one of the most complex machines ever built while getting straight forward answers from the geniuses building this monstrosity. I bet if they reduced those diamond spheres to 1/10th their current size and a preloaded chain gun was shooting these at 500 rounds a second, this would evenly perpetuate the fusion process if the timing could be perfected. That's kind of how an ITC engine works. You add a drop of gas to an empty chamber and blow it up so it moves a load above it which of course is a piston to spin a shaft. And when you get up to thousands of rpms, you got some really nice power to play with. One other concern, is how to off load this fantastic amount of power to the rest of the e-grid. That will require a vast amount of infrastructure, too.

  • @bobmarier8279

    @bobmarier8279

    Ай бұрын

    😅

  • @shamrockfile
    @shamrockfile9 ай бұрын

    Remember the first cell phone, big battery box with an old fashion phone. In less than a decade cell phone became a mini computer and we have reached a point where they are improving battery life, software, photo tech, and apps. This achievement is a meaningful event that could change the course of energy production on this planet and lead to inventions associated with this energy source that will be unbelievable. This is very positive news. Star Trek here we come.

  • @Rad-gb5dl
    @Rad-gb5dl9 ай бұрын

    I love how we have all these "breakthroughs" as we have a ufo hearing on the 26th.

  • @user-fs7df1xg9v

    @user-fs7df1xg9v

    9 ай бұрын

    It's gonna get real interesting

  • @Rad-gb5dl

    @Rad-gb5dl

    9 ай бұрын

    @@user-fs7df1xg9v If you could ask a question what would you ask. If you have whistleblower of interest which one?

  • @Showloveclothing

    @Showloveclothing

    9 ай бұрын

    Why do you need the government to confirm? You can find all the evidence yourself, whatever it is floating around has clearly been here for a long time and is clearly aware of us, yet they don't want to make contact. They might of help us along the way but they definitely don't want permanent contract.

  • @Metapharsical

    @Metapharsical

    9 ай бұрын

    "Eyewitnesses" of Extraterrestrials again ? 😂🤣🙃💀

  • @Theneweastwood
    @Theneweastwood9 ай бұрын

    For the love of science! Thank you to each member of your teams and your families! We are blessed to have you working on our behalf! God bless you!

  • @0397rb

    @0397rb

    9 ай бұрын

    they just disproved God

  • @meajmal

    @meajmal

    9 ай бұрын

    there are some smart people in this world which brings back hope for our species in my mind. She is definitely one. What an interesting thing to study.

  • @therexbellator

    @therexbellator

    9 ай бұрын

    It's nice to see both a pro-Science and spiritual remark in the same remark. That is a rarity these days. As a science-accepting spiritual theist we need more of this on the internet.

  • @EperogiLimousine

    @EperogiLimousine

    8 ай бұрын

    @@0397rb we can’t make scientific breakthrough simply because it’s a sin? I feel like not religion, but religious people are trying to hold humanity back

  • @0397rb

    @0397rb

    8 ай бұрын

    @@EperogiLimousine they definitely are.

  • @chrislong3938
    @chrislong39389 ай бұрын

    "60 Minutes" is the most successful television broadcast in history. Offering hard-hitting investigative reports, interviews, feature segments, and profiles of people in the news, the broadcast began in 1968 and is still a hit, over 50 seasons later, regularly making Nielsen's Top 10. You know you're going to have a bad day when you get to your office and a 60 Minutes crew is sitting in your lobby.

  • @victorhuffman5068
    @victorhuffman50682 ай бұрын

    Question how many watts of energy does it take to collect x amount of carbon ? are we just adding to the problem trying to do this process?

  • @hectordavidortiz
    @hectordavidortiz9 ай бұрын

    @16:29 Me, when they tell me commercial fusion is 10 years away. 😢

  • @wolfgangpreier9160

    @wolfgangpreier9160

    9 ай бұрын

    I always thought its 20 years away?

  • @tjocho

    @tjocho

    9 ай бұрын

    @@wolfgangpreier9160 30? :D

  • @hectordavidortiz

    @hectordavidortiz

    9 ай бұрын

    @@wolfgangpreier9160 more like 50.

  • @caouette81

    @caouette81

    9 ай бұрын

    it always 10 years away...next year it will still be 10 years away >

  • @eleventy-seven

    @eleventy-seven

    9 ай бұрын

    Its 199 million kilometers away.🎉🎉🎉

  • @ramonpunsalang3397
    @ramonpunsalang33979 ай бұрын

    Yeah, 300 units in to get 1 unit out shows how far away the goal is. Better to invest the money inmodular Thorium reactors.

  • @cwc6632

    @cwc6632

    9 ай бұрын

    Thorium reactors are too dirty and have not been proven to be a worthwhile alternative.

  • @dondecker3597
    @dondecker35973 ай бұрын

    This sounds like ICF(Inertial Confinement Fusion). I worked on this at KMS Fusion in the '80's. A great achievement but orders of magnitude from the solution. Congratulations to the team and good luck in the future.

  • @dr.horror9046
    @dr.horror90469 ай бұрын

    It doesn’t matter what year it is, 60 minutes is still in 1983

  • @ambition112
    @ambition1129 ай бұрын

    0:28: ⚡ Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have achieved successful fusion of hydrogen atoms using the world's largest lasers, marking a major breakthrough in the pursuit of commercial fusion power. 5:21: 💥 Scientists have successfully conducted a laser fusion experiment, achieving temperatures hotter than the sun, which could revolutionize electric power generation. 11:03: 🔬 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory achieves a major milestone in fusion power with successful ignition, but experts believe commercial fusion power within a decade is unlikely. 15:30: 🚗 The Salton Sea area in the US is set to become a major supplier of lithium for electric car batteries, with plans for a new plant to produce 20,000 tons per year. 19:47: 🔋 The Salton Sea in California has the potential to become a major source of lithium, attracting companies like Energy Source and Warren Buffett's bhe Renewables. 24:22: 🌍 The US is investing in domestic lithium production to reduce costs and carbon emissions in the electric vehicle industry. 29:08: 🌍 Scientists in Iceland are using a process called Orca to capture and store CO2 in volcanic rock, but scaling up fast enough to slow climate change is a challenge. 34:20: 🌍 Carbon capture technology must be used in conjunction with reducing emissions and transitioning away from fossil fuels. 38:17: 🌍 Occidental plans to build 130 more direct air capture plants by 2035 in order to avoid a climate catastrophe. Recap by Tammy AI

  • @johndawson6057

    @johndawson6057

    9 ай бұрын

    People like you make the world go round❤

  • @everythingtv2325

    @everythingtv2325

    9 ай бұрын

    China already did this months ago 😂 the U.S. is behind bad lol I wouldn’t be surprised if this was fake just like the United States faked the moon landing smh 🤦‍♂️

  • @B01

    @B01

    9 ай бұрын

    Legend

  • @mattw8814

    @mattw8814

    9 ай бұрын

    Goatest goat of all time

  • @nelson8527

    @nelson8527

    9 ай бұрын

    Inno who you are, but I want you making important decisions for the world.

  • @BrantK147
    @BrantK1479 ай бұрын

    They basically proved that commercial fusion is ages away.

  • @DieselRamcharger

    @DieselRamcharger

    3 ай бұрын

    the people who built the great pyramids had it..... wonder what knowledge was lost?

  • @williamgidrewicz4775
    @williamgidrewicz47758 ай бұрын

    I think that a successful fusion device uses masers, sasers to rip protons in some sort of special optical fibers, thus enabling them to fuse or perhaps be tied together! Maybe by encasing protons inside of some types of nano webs they are coerced by masers and sasers in a certain frequency to blend!

  • @ericlogan6159
    @ericlogan61598 ай бұрын

    How do you ship it there?

  • @MurseSamson
    @MurseSamson9 ай бұрын

    So, nearly all previous Fusion tests had a qReaction: This recent test had a qReaction: 1.5. This was incredible. We've rarely ever had a net positive of energy come from the reaction test itself. (Although, that is not always what the tests were trying to achieve.) The best qTotal Energy in/out has moved from: ~1/5000 in the year 1984, to 1/156 in 2023. Much better! Technically that's 32x better! Still a long way to go. Especially that last 4-12% to break even.... That's statistically the hardest part in efficiency science... Let's see what these brilliant people can come up with. 👍💥

  • @budgetking2591

    @budgetking2591

    9 ай бұрын

    Well said, the video makes it seem that they actually got more energy out then they put in, wich isn't nearly the case, as you explained very well.

  • @sinkpehnarossfire454

    @sinkpehnarossfire454

    9 ай бұрын

    🌎: "🧐 😶 🤗 🤔"

  • @MoiraWillenov
    @MoiraWillenov9 ай бұрын

    10:12 A solution to firing ten times a second over long periods is possible with a series of quick charge high capacity capacitors arranged in sequence. The last capacitor discharges ( The first pulse ) into the laser. The output from the laser is then routed to the last capacitor discharged to recharge it as the next capacitor fires, with the excess power routed to the grid. The need would be for very durable and large capacitors for this project.

  • @katrinaanon1038

    @katrinaanon1038

    9 ай бұрын

    So far they are getting 1/3 more power than they are putting into it by a mammoth facility. If they are using pure hydrogen that might be nice but is it doable. Since 60 Minutes technical knowhow is rather limited it could be a deuterium-tritium mix which could prove expensive. The use of lithium greatly reduced the size and expense of the hydrogen bomb, even then they still used fissile material to get the fusion to work. I will be more impressed with a sustainable reaction which this is not. The Manhattan Project had a sustainable fission reaction, and in this project they are fusing and object smaller than a BB for one pop. I also wonder when you are producing megawatts or gigawatts of power will the helium and iron production remain insignificant or will it become a problem like carbon dioxide is for hydrocarbons?

  • @hottractor2456

    @hottractor2456

    9 ай бұрын

    @@katrinaanon1038 On the helium, it should reduce the current amount of hydrocarbons used to extract the helium currently being produced. Donno about the iron, how much is being produced?

  • @schloops8473

    @schloops8473

    9 ай бұрын

    @@katrinaanon1038 they are generating about 3% of the power they are spending and even that 3% is in a form we can't use and will suffer losses being transformed. They are lying to you.

  • @SwartieLoveJoy

    @SwartieLoveJoy

    9 ай бұрын

    The laser consumed more energy than the fusion produced. And I think they are lying about it producing fusion, because there is no excess energy. LENR (Cold Fusion) is the only fusion that has produced real, measurable, net excess energy. It has been verified now.

  • @samdoors5132

    @samdoors5132

    9 ай бұрын

    The bad thing is lots of these components are made in China, and eventually will need Overhaulin’ and upgrading to get the desired results. Everything is contracted out to different countries . The city I live in manufactured the first Apollo landing on the moon. Also, they manufactured a challenger all that is gone. Now all that’s left on the huge site is a Kaiser Hospital, a huge mall and a Huge museum actually a unique museum that shows everything about all it’s achievements for space exploration there’s event, the Apollo castle, the original one there along with space suits pictures in and anything related. Nowadays, everything is contracted out to different states, including China what a shame

  • @yostevedotcom
    @yostevedotcom9 ай бұрын

    Growing up in the 90s I've waited my whole life for this. I was so excited to see it happen. People think electricity everything is pointless. Not if this works. Welcome to star trek

  • @katrinaanon1038

    @katrinaanon1038

    9 ай бұрын

    When you consider the yield on the tiny spheres essential to get this thing working and yet it is not sustainable...remember the Manhattan Project was a sustainable fission reaction...and this one is one shot before they have to recharge the whole system to generate that billionth of a second pulse, you may have to wait until the 24th Century before they can get this thing to be practical..

  • @ramonpuello2357

    @ramonpuello2357

    9 ай бұрын

    Free energy! It's been around for a long time.

  • @ramonpuello2357

    @ramonpuello2357

    9 ай бұрын

    Everything is energy. Energy creates life.

  • @kamakaziozzie3038

    @kamakaziozzie3038

    9 ай бұрын

    Zero point energy has been around for decades- and suppressed. Check it out. There are many extremely wealthy individuals that will do anything to stop this from occurring.

  • @Box545x39

    @Box545x39

    9 ай бұрын

    @@kamakaziozzie3038 They've killed many people to keep free energy technology suppressed. It's right around the corner though, they can't stop the truth.

  • @toneyeye
    @toneyeye20 күн бұрын

    The comparison of the ignition at Livermore to the Wright brothers flight is pure lunacy. It was the flight of a complete assembly of a plane, unlike the ignition which is one of many parts and systems that are yet to be succesfully designed.

  • @vernonbrechin826

    @vernonbrechin826

    10 күн бұрын

    The reported experiment at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) took approximately a week to set up but the actual nuclear fusion reaction lasted for approximately 0.000,000,000,08 second. There was no significant amount of propagation of the reaction in the microscopic portion of the fuel that did react and approximately 96% of the extremely expensive fuel was blasted away before it could react. The maximum shot rate of the enormous NIF lasers is about one shot per day. It is rare to get anywhere close to that rate. Since this announcement , almost 1.5 years ago, only a few of the NIF shots have gotten close to this announced shot.

  • @johnmaher1425
    @johnmaher14259 ай бұрын

    It was hotter than what we believed to be the temperature of the center of the sun. Fixed it

  • @PromethorYT
    @PromethorYT9 ай бұрын

    It is an incredible achievement, but there is soooo much energy used for the lasers that the energy produced by the fusion is much smaller than what was put in the system.

  • @williesreserve7475

    @williesreserve7475

    8 ай бұрын

    shooting lasers at things.. real incredible

  • @PromethorYT

    @PromethorYT

    8 ай бұрын

    @@williesreserve7475 You don't know much about the complexity of this task.

  • @williesreserve7475

    @williesreserve7475

    8 ай бұрын

    @@PromethorYT they where doing this 60 years ago and they literally tell you what they are doing. it doesn't take a brain surgeon to figure this out.. they shoot 300 units of energy at the target and only get 3 units back. the 3 units they get back is not even new energy it is just the aftershock of the 300 units shot at. this is nothing more than a scam

  • @KanyeWesticlez

    @KanyeWesticlez

    8 ай бұрын

    You're not wrong, but there is also a ton of energy used to generate our current systems as well. This is why we need to begin discussing scale ability.

  • @gavinlew8273

    @gavinlew8273

    8 ай бұрын

    It's a very expensive ignition system. There could be other ways to start the fusion process as well...but lasers just kinda work for now :D

  • @mr.ackermann807
    @mr.ackermann8079 ай бұрын

    Im confused as to why many people keep calling it a breakthrough instead of a milestone. Maybe to get positive feed back from the people and sell the news.

  • @scalemodeltutor9841

    @scalemodeltutor9841

    9 ай бұрын

    Isn’t this the first time humans ever did this? So I guess it’s a breakthrough, furthermore advancements will be milestones.

  • @mr.ackermann807

    @mr.ackermann807

    9 ай бұрын

    @scalemodeltutor9841 If you're referring to the nif, then they have done this before, just not extra energy out from the reaction than the laser input but not the whole system still. Others have also called it a milestone from kyle to thunderfoot and some others who went over. It is impressive, but not a breakthrough the news makes it out to be. From what I and others understand, a breakthrough would be net gain or more energy out than the whole system.

  • @The1stDukeDroklar

    @The1stDukeDroklar

    9 ай бұрын

    It's pretty meaningless since the energy required to fire the lasers and run all the computers and equipment in the facility was not taken into account in order to make it sound like it's more momentous than it actually is. They put in two units of laser/heat energy and got out 3 units of heat energy. They would've had to get 1000s of units out in order to come close to breaking even on the energy consumption of the experiment. Don't forget, that heat energy has to be turned into electricity and there is a huge loss in the conversion.

  • @mr.ackermann807

    @mr.ackermann807

    9 ай бұрын

    @The1stDukeDroklar agree enough. I believe it was 3million out put of the 2million input from lasers but around 400million into the system. So about 133x or 0.0075 percent output, not to efficient and most likely not going to be for some time. I wonder how efficient those flash lamps are that add energy to the lasers?

  • @The1stDukeDroklar

    @The1stDukeDroklar

    9 ай бұрын

    @@mr.ackermann807 Yes, 2 MJ in and they got 3 MJ out. Keep in mind that it's two different kinds of energy people are getting confused about. The MJ they are talking about is heat energy provided by the lasers and 3 mj of heat energy released by the reaction. Any heat energy released would have to be converted into electricity through the same old process of heating steam to turn turbines that would convert the heat into electricity. So, when everything is said and done they used 100s of MJ of actual electricity to generate 1 lousy mj of heat for a fraction of a second. It simply isn't a viable approach.

  • @jeromedamian5740
    @jeromedamian57405 ай бұрын

    I've always been a huge fan of alternative energy resources and renewable energy technology. Personally, I wanted to be an engineer, but I couldn't understand the math. My question is, when they use these products, what's the outcome disposal of these products in the end . How much waste and what will be the means of it in the end . I also want to understand the impact in which they are harvesting these resources as far as environmental factor during long-term Effects.. Fantastic topic 👏 on 60 minutes , I really enjoy this . Brilliant.

  • @waynemackenziesr5005
    @waynemackenziesr50058 ай бұрын

    So just a amature question I'm sure, but instead of requiring such intense laser power, why not a domino/=cumulative effect? Such as igniting a catalyst that in turn could ramp up/cascade the temperature to the required level for fusion to take place like you start with kindling which ignites succeeding larger wood? If there were no alternative fuels that could reach such a level, wouldn't a small fission reaction be usable? Like say some form of a particle accelerator style trigger or simply a tiny tiny tiny bomb? As I understood it, you only really needed to start the fission process and there after, other than the magnetic containment and a steady supply of fissionable material, there was no additional huge initial power requirements since from that starting point, it would be self sustaining (qReaction: >1) yes? Please correct my ignorance on any of these points. I work in mental health not physics but paid attention as much as I could in my undergrad classes.Wack away at my ignorance. It will help me.

  • @daily_rhetoric
    @daily_rhetoric9 ай бұрын

    I appreciate this whole report and the science behind fusion. Thank you very much.

  • @gaberoyalll
    @gaberoyalll9 ай бұрын

    37:00 ships 🚢 have been running on nuclear for like 50 years . Another fun fact is The amount of fuel actually be used on a sailing depends primarily on the ship’s speed. Most ship engines have been designed for top speeds ranging between 20 and 25 knots per hour, which is between 23 and 28 miles per hour. A Panamax container ship can consume 63,000 gallons of marine fuel per day at that speed. Average 1 way trip 15 to 18 days

  • @mb-3faze

    @mb-3faze

    9 ай бұрын

    Just knots, not knots per hour.

  • @michaelbrinks8089

    @michaelbrinks8089

    9 ай бұрын

    Yup its running on nuclear fission which breaks atoms and creates radioactive waste. Fusion fuses atoms together,creates way more power energy and doesn't have radioactive waste. It would be nice if giant cargo ships could run on nuclear power but it'd be very dangerous due to accident risk and hijacking risk. It's possible fusion powered cargo ships could be safer since no risk of radioactive ☢ meltdown or crash poisoning the waters.

  • @mb-3faze

    @mb-3faze

    9 ай бұрын

    @@michaelbrinks8089 Sadly, that ain't the case. Fusion will produce prodigious amounts of energetic neutrons which will happily make other materials radioactive or toxic in one way or another. Fusion reactors will have to be very well shielded. High energy neutrons will happily convert phosphorus atoms in your DNA to silicon, the first step to becoming a borg :)

  • @nickg1895

    @nickg1895

    9 ай бұрын

    @@michaelbrinks8089 Nuclear submarines typically store their spent nuclear fuel on board until the submarine reaches a port where the fuel can be offloaded and transported to a nuclear waste storage facility. The process of handling and disposing of nuclear waste is highly regulated and requires strict safety protocols to ensure that the waste is handled in a way that minimizes the risk of harm to people and the environment. There is a common misconception that nuclear waste is just pumped out of the system as it runs, like exhaust from an engine. This is simply not the case. The nuclear waste is just the collection of radioactive isotopes (think of individual atoms of rare metals) that are trapped within the fuel. Once the core has served its useful life, currently around 30-40 years, then it is cut out of the ship and replaced with a new one.

  • @michaelbrinks8089

    @michaelbrinks8089

    9 ай бұрын

    @@nickg1895 Yeah, I dunno all the specific details but knew the dangerous radioactive ☢ waste obviously remained in the sub until it could be safely offloaded and knew it's not released like some sort of engine exhaust. I'm not sure if or how my previous comment made you think I had a misconception that the waste somehow gets expelled out of the sub.

  • @Isamun907
    @Isamun9079 ай бұрын

    To attain AAcP x KCVkm² the -Jlm would need to be prop temp and tone..sound has always been key

  • @robinpettit7827
    @robinpettit78277 ай бұрын

    Lithium is the current battery technology but major progress is being made with room temp liquid salt, solid state batteries and others, of course. A major lithium deposit was found in Maine.

  • @tobyihli9470
    @tobyihli94709 ай бұрын

    When she said, “fizzy water,” I thought here we go, another carbon sequestration plant. A holding cell, if you will. Swear to God, at that very moment, I literally thought to myself that, the only way to make real difference, as far as the earth is concerned, is to turn carbon into rock, and then she said it. ‘Carbon into rock!” Astounding! Now, you got my attention.

  • @Miata822

    @Miata822

    9 ай бұрын

    A better move would be to stop turning rock into atmosphere. Seems obvious, I know.

  • @tommcguire8543

    @tommcguire8543

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@Miata822ejje6jd66d6j6d6. Irrr

  • @samdoors5132
    @samdoors51329 ай бұрын

    I live in Los Angeles. I’ve been to the Salton Sea many times not to swim or fish, but to kick back and drink Coors light the weather is hot but nice. The water looks nice from the short distance. Also, I bum around and watch all these projects that are going on, it’s extremely interesting there’s one thing I don’t think these companies are thinking about the San Andreas Fault begins at the Salton Sea. It goes all the way up 850 miles to the border of Oregon all these earthquakes that we get in California is because of the fault line.. there will be 8.0 or greater earthquake in Los Angeles and all the surrounding cities. It will be catastrophic all these new buildings in downtown will come down. I don’t care how good they build them. Lots of bridges will collapse, despite being retrofit . Geologist say the Andreas fault reduces an extreme catastrophic earthquake. Once every 300 years that 300 years has come and gone without one that means we are overdue three 400 years overdue. I don’t know what these companies that are set up and will continue to build up upon at the Salton Sea will do when that happens

  • @TylerSmithMusic1
    @TylerSmithMusic16 ай бұрын

    This is the stuff we need to know more about. 🙏

  • @ericlogan6159
    @ericlogan61598 ай бұрын

    How do you power the fans?

  • @corujario2752
    @corujario27529 ай бұрын

    I have huge hopes for sustainable fusion reactors. The comparison to flight technology just made me more frustrated. Flight evolved very quickly and with a small fraction of the investments already made on fusion tech. I keep thinking if we are approaching the goal by a wrong angle. Of course, I have no better suggestions to place. I hope our best minds will figure this out in my lifetime.

  • @kantizalavadia9874

    @kantizalavadia9874

    9 ай бұрын

    39:28 Remember Michal Faraday. What is the use of a newborn baby? Thanks to relentless efforts by our scientists that has brought us comforts.. ans some discomforts

  • @claybair4904

    @claybair4904

    9 ай бұрын

    the biggest problem with fusion is containment having the gravity or magnetic field to force the atoms to stay where they are and continue fusing

  • @StephenGillie

    @StephenGillie

    9 ай бұрын

    @@claybair4904 The biggest challenge is to create more energy than it costs in input and confinement pressure. The Sun gets this for free from gravity.

  • @Mr.Clownensky

    @Mr.Clownensky

    9 ай бұрын

    Not in the next 20 to 30yrs

  • @katrinaanon1038

    @katrinaanon1038

    9 ай бұрын

    Government did not build the planes. The most successful aircraft were built to satisfy private demand.

  • @weijingburr2392
    @weijingburr23929 ай бұрын

    Oil isn't just used for fuel. And any plastic substitute is as just carbon intense as oil. Oil will always be around, but it will be used more efficiently.

  • @chrisobber5604

    @chrisobber5604

    9 ай бұрын

    That's why we should stop burning oil for fuel. It's just too precious to burn it.

  • @unchargedpickles6372

    @unchargedpickles6372

    9 ай бұрын

    , at current consumption, we have by some accounts an estimated 47 years of oil left to be extracted. That equates to somewhere in the region of 1.65 trillion barrels of proven oil reserves. Other sources up this estimate a bit, but most agree we have around 50 years left, give or take. For reference, a barrel of crude oil is about 42 gallons or about 159 liters. With regards to other fossil fuels, we have an estimated 53 years of natural gas, and 114 years of coal left to rip out of the ground.

  • @eleventy-seven

    @eleventy-seven

    9 ай бұрын

    Synthetic Oil???

  • @iloveaviation-burgerclub-a8145

    @iloveaviation-burgerclub-a8145

    9 ай бұрын

    First lets shrink the cosmetics industry. Go to the market and look how many damn useless pastes and stuff you can count that have no use but massive marketing.

  • @solandri69

    @solandri69

    9 ай бұрын

    Oil is used to form plastics because it sits at a high energy state (that's why it's such a great fuel). The vast majority of chemical reactions used by industry starts with high-energy ingredients, and go down the energy gradient. That allows the reactions to proceed "for free" in terms of energy cost. (This a general rule, not a hard and fast rule. There are notable exceptions. e.g. Fertilizer manufacturing requires lots of energy to create ammonia. Bauxite requires lots of energy to convert into aluminum.) So we get plastics from oil because that's the cheapest way to create polymers (in terms of energy cost). Plants create natural polymers (wood) by going up the energy gradient, using energy from sunlight. With easy access to cheap energy, our chemists would be freed from the shackles of energy cost, and able to explore ways to create artificial polymers from base materials by going up the energy gradient. Instead of relying on starting with oil and going down the energy gradient. It's also worth mentioning that one of the primary benefits of plastic (resistance against biodegradation) is also the reason it's a problem (it's slow to break down if improperly disposed, because it only breaks down via UV light in sunlight). And this same advantage/problem would apply to other artificial polymers we develop. In fact plants evolved wood (basically very long chains of sugars) to thwart animals which were eating them for sustenance (to get at the energy stored in the sugar). To date, only specialized bacteria are able to break down cellulose into shorter chains like starch and sugar. And herbivorous animals have a symbiotic relationship with these bacteria in their gut. There have been a few instances of bacteria developing the ability to break down plastics. So in a few thousand years I expect the problem of plastic waste in the environment will take care of itself. Plastic still sits at a pretty high energy state (why it burns so readily), so any bacteria which can break it down will tap into a new energy source.

  • @shannonpena2760
    @shannonpena27609 ай бұрын

    Fascinating

  • @bulletproofpepper2
    @bulletproofpepper28 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. Still waiting for a hoverboard.

  • @SethiozProject
    @SethiozProject9 ай бұрын

    this reminds me of the very first computer that weighted like 60 tons and had to be re-programmed by physically moving cables from one place to another. it was in 40s, but only in late 80s they took it to a whole new level. i think they're very close to a breakthru here, maybe in 10 years or so, they could make that machine much, much smaller. once they get it working, they can then use that fusion energy to easily make more. the start is always the hardest. computers took a long time to evolve, but once they did, now it goes so fast that 5 year old computer is very old and slow compared to new stuff, however when it comes to computers, it's done on purpose. nobody wants to release the BEST they possibly can, because then they'd have nothing left to sell. like graphics card companies, such as nvidia and AMD. they have been doing this for past 10 years, they release just slightly better model each year and ask very high price for it, only to make more money. at this point, they could easily release a graphics card that outputs 100 more power than current best model (RTX 4090 i think), but they won't do it, because then for next 10-20 years they'd actually have to work hard to make billions. right now they are just sitting on their thumbs, doing nothing, becuase they have models ready for next 5-10 years that they have split into "levels" and selling them after every year with slight improvements. however with fusion reaction, i don't think there will be such greedy system, there's either fusion or there isn't. once they get it going, then there's no "next" level, it will be producing more energy than you input, so in matter of years, world will have unlimited free clean energy.

  • @xenuno

    @xenuno

    9 ай бұрын

    Do post back in 20 years. Whether you will still be an optimist is the question ..

  • @ROVA00

    @ROVA00

    9 ай бұрын

    I sadly disagree. Fusion won’t be free energy for all. It will be “free energy” for those producing it. Everyone else will still pay just as much

  • @dragonmaker1541

    @dragonmaker1541

    9 ай бұрын

    The first computer used lead tubes and punch cards. Free power??? Is gas free, is coal free, is electric free, is solar free? Solar breaks needs repair, replacements etc. Does it ever pay itself off? They use your taxes to make this, but free? Not!

  • @markhill9275

    @markhill9275

    9 ай бұрын

    Actually the first computer was a wooden frame with beads on it. It could add, subtract, multiply, divide.

  • @DeezNutz-ce5se

    @DeezNutz-ce5se

    9 ай бұрын

    Good analogy.

  • @ddexter8723
    @ddexter87239 ай бұрын

    If those pellets are super light then I wonder if you can use sonic levitation to suspend them in place. Maybe they would still move around too much but the position would be very predictable and you could sync the laser pulse to the correct time.

  • @PawneeStormChaser

    @PawneeStormChaser

    8 ай бұрын

    That’s a fascinating idea.

  • @user-dx3cv3md1d
    @user-dx3cv3md1d7 ай бұрын

    Would the target cylinder be the kinetic frame for the atomic structure to make a quatum polarity occulation or color😮

  • @user-dx3cv3md1d
    @user-dx3cv3md1d7 ай бұрын

    Would the spectrum thermal frane from you holding the material be the photo reisitor atomic polarity start for thr kinetic shell 🥺

  • @MYOB990
    @MYOB9909 ай бұрын

    Yet another breakthrough bringing fusion to within another 20 years.

  • @Fireworxs2012

    @Fireworxs2012

    9 ай бұрын

    *You mean in another 100 years?*

  • @Friedbrain11

    @Friedbrain11

    9 ай бұрын

    Or longer heheheh( depends on how much they can milk the taxpayer for).

  • @WolfGunBlood6669
    @WolfGunBlood66699 ай бұрын

    So what if you put a solar focusing tower on top of that building up there and then surrounded it with a bunch of bell curve shaped refraction discs. And directed in a bunch of focused solar energy into the center of the reaction with the lasers to help push past that melting point adding an extra 2000 k or better depending on how good your directional Tower is and all it would require would be opening a tiny mirror or door way.

  • @donaldgoertzen8741
    @donaldgoertzen87417 ай бұрын

    Oh, and the nuclear industry has ALWAYS been honest and transparent!

  • @amythinks
    @amythinks9 ай бұрын

    That's some scary stuff. So many positive applications. So many apocalyptic ones.

  • @fr2ncm9
    @fr2ncm99 ай бұрын

    We should be doing more to work with existing nuclear technology. Fission power has become much safer then it used to be. There are designs for molten salt reactors that are scheduled to begin operations within the next two years. Small, modular nuclear reactors are far cheaper and safer than old water cooled reactors.

  • @DanniDuck

    @DanniDuck

    9 ай бұрын

    The Soviets did it right. Everyone needs radioisotope thermoelectric generators in their house.

  • @cheafchecker72

    @cheafchecker72

    9 ай бұрын

    Theyre neat but they have a couple of problems.They produce a lot of plutonium that could be used in bombs and the only molten salt reactor they tested had quite a few of problems. Watt for Watt renewable energies are juat way cheaper than any other form of energy generation.

  • @DanniDuck

    @DanniDuck

    9 ай бұрын

    @@cheafchecker72 (was a joke)

  • @cheafchecker72

    @cheafchecker72

    9 ай бұрын

    @@DanniDuck didn’t even saw your comment lol was supposed to be under the first one lol

  • @off6848

    @off6848

    9 ай бұрын

    @@cheafchecker72 Seems unrealistic considering one could make a hydrogen bomb without plutonium just need uranium and tritium.

  • @courtlaw1
    @courtlaw19 ай бұрын

    For all us folks that follow super science knew fusion was coming to reality. I used to roll my eyes at all those scientist that used to say that it wouldn't happen in our life times. Like really, we live in a scientific world. I am 45 and my entire life from reading science fiction, reading science books and scientific journals have seen the future literally unfold in front of my eyes. My good I wish I could live to 2100. Completely change my lifestyle to only eating healthy, doing whatever it takes to live as long as I can. My Grand father made it to 94 and the dementia did him in. Looking forward to the future. God bless humanity.

  • @georgeanddaddecker7563

    @georgeanddaddecker7563

    9 ай бұрын

    You will make t to 2100. They will perfect growing replaceable organs/ cloning by the time you need them. In addition, many other advancements will be available to extend your life considerably.

  • @tequilasalad1535

    @tequilasalad1535

    9 ай бұрын

    @@georgeanddaddecker7563 Do you really think that "they" would let "you" or "I" live forever? Think about it

  • @TS-ij9cz

    @TS-ij9cz

    9 ай бұрын

    Fusion is still far from reality

  • @JDAbelRN

    @JDAbelRN

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@georgeanddaddecker7563 yes, say 10 or twenty years.

  • @sergios4620

    @sergios4620

    9 ай бұрын

    Tequila salad, that is reserved for the owners of this planet.

  • @quaidcarlobulloch9300
    @quaidcarlobulloch93008 ай бұрын

    That is a very impressive milestone!!!!!!

  • @chanchopanza
    @chanchopanza7 ай бұрын

    No cats were harmed during the fusion test 😸

  • @jklein17
    @jklein179 ай бұрын

    Part of the money that is being spent by Stellantis is going into constructing two battery plants. One of those is located in Kokomo Indiana. It is certainly being built on a very fast pace. They are currently installing two underground gas pipelines to support the plant and those lines are already more than 30 miles long.

  • @j22kfk222kla

    @j22kfk222kla

    9 ай бұрын

    Too bad all of Stellantis' vehicles are junk.

  • @benluciano4980

    @benluciano4980

    9 ай бұрын

    Stellantis Vehicles are built like crap. So I am neither impressed nor excited.

  • @off6848

    @off6848

    9 ай бұрын

    @@benluciano4980 Junk in what sense? We hardly get any of them here in America except RAM and stuff. RAM trucks aren't super popular but I've liked the newer ones work mates drove. Hardly any vehicles aren't junk tbh

  • @koondog2000

    @koondog2000

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@off6848quit driving RAMs and you'll change your opinion a bit

  • @Cryaboutmyhandle

    @Cryaboutmyhandle

    9 ай бұрын

    @@off6848 you think a ram is a nice truck. Tells us all we need to know.

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
    @deaddocreallydeaddoc52449 ай бұрын

    It has taken decades to get fusion to this point and it will take maybe decades to get it to the point that it can be used to produce commercial electricity. Meanwhile, we've got about eleven companies ready to construct Molten Salt Thorium Reactors that can't melt down and solve ALL of the problems and then some.

  • @tetrabromobisphenol

    @tetrabromobisphenol

    9 ай бұрын

    People don't bother to inform themselves about anything, so they lap this Buck Rogers stuff up like Pavlovian dogs. Indeed, the Gen IV SMCs that are about to come online here (already online in China and Russia) can solve energy issues for millennia, but they're too simple, too "boring", and too practical and therefore they are not a part of the Bread and Circuses narrative.

  • @hugodiazgarcia1266
    @hugodiazgarcia12663 ай бұрын

    Congratulations on your video analysis on nuclear fusion breakthrough...

  • @snedler
    @snedler14 күн бұрын

    Seriously, there have been free energy devices invented a long time ago. The problem was that the oil companies didn't like that.. And now this expensive project is being researched and has almost no great advances yet..

  • @eaboatnuts76
    @eaboatnuts769 ай бұрын

    If fusion is ever mastered , the powers that be will never let it come to fruition.

  • @Allexz

    @Allexz

    9 ай бұрын

    @@S1nster The people profiting on the rest of us is not interested in the progress of others, they're interested in money and power.

  • @Allexz

    @Allexz

    9 ай бұрын

    @@S1nster Thats why we use billions of tons of fossile fuels in both vehicles and power generation while there are truly fossile free alternatives just waiting to be used, right? Thats why hundreds of thousands each year get lung cancer from burning coal while nuclear could have been used and recycled right? Nope, it's because there are entities that profits from human suffering and those entities comes first, always.

  • @parthenocarpySA

    @parthenocarpySA

    9 ай бұрын

    You don't understand how technology spreads. The powers that be never wanted Russia to get nukes. Almost as if their agency isn't what you'd think!

  • @visionentertainment8006

    @visionentertainment8006

    9 ай бұрын

    They ain't gonna stop nothing.

  • @xenuno

    @xenuno

    9 ай бұрын

    The powers didn't stop electric cars the first time. Poor vehicles and lack of market did. You won't see anyone stop fusion either because for commercial level production, the tech will always be 20 years away. Fusion is relatively easy, mass production of it isn't ..

  • @itsmodsiw
    @itsmodsiw9 ай бұрын

    Great episode.

  • @xy4489
    @xy44899 ай бұрын

    How is that mechanism for fusion different from a tiny H-bomb? How to scale it?

  • @jaredthetrain5309
    @jaredthetrain53099 ай бұрын

    “From a machine, a star is born” Does that mean we live in a computer?

  • @jsyaprudin4294
    @jsyaprudin42949 ай бұрын

    The fact that this video is only 39 minutes long is bugging me.

  • @crazycutz8072

    @crazycutz8072

    9 ай бұрын

    It's for TV ... and as usual, American TV producers Don't think that the average American can focus more than 39 minutes 😂😅 and that might be the truth.

  • @mb-3faze

    @mb-3faze

    9 ай бұрын

    Budget cuts.

  • @lontr9771

    @lontr9771

    9 ай бұрын

    It doesn’t account for commercial breaks if broadcasted on over the air TV.

  • @nightshadehelis9821
    @nightshadehelis98219 ай бұрын

    Wow. This entire episode made me realize just how stupid I really am. Humans are capable of amazing things.

  • @williesreserve7475

    @williesreserve7475

    8 ай бұрын

    shooting a fk ton of lasers at something with giant capacitors.. real amazing, not like they where doing this 60 years ago

  • @nitesh0mhatre
    @nitesh0mhatre8 ай бұрын

    how carbfix profits to keep it running ?

  • @indigobluu
    @indigobluu9 ай бұрын

    All of these ideas sound great but like the last lady said. "Walk the talk" should be the theme of this video

  • @Ratkill
    @Ratkill9 ай бұрын

    19:20 "Lithium" is definitly a fast and loose term in this docu. There's a huge distinction between mined lithium and refined lithium. There's more than enough lithium mining opportunities around the world and an abundant supply of unprocessed lithium in the US and Canada, its the refining that is the hurdle to overcome for any nation that has any semblance of environmental regulation. Byproducts of the process include hydrochloric acid, uranium and sulfuric acid, and for obvious reasons, China is more than happy to take on this role in the supply chain. Increasing the supply of unrefined lithium does little without domestic processing capabilities. It is a nice little article for the shareholders though, its nice to get them excited once in a while.

  • @Metapharsical

    @Metapharsical

    9 ай бұрын

    Well said! And just the right amount of snark to drive the point home! 😉

  • @kevinedwards7079

    @kevinedwards7079

    9 ай бұрын

    Erudite

  • @johnh6245

    @johnh6245

    9 ай бұрын

    It’s worse than just ‘lithium’ since for tritium breeding the lithium will need to be isotopically enriched to increase the Lithium 6 content from its natural 7.5% up to even 60%. Here we are not talking in terms of grams or kilograms, but 10s of tonnes, and still worse is that there is no easy enrichment method. In spite of all the hype and investment, DT fusion sadly has no future.

  • @Cryaboutmyhandle

    @Cryaboutmyhandle

    9 ай бұрын

    The earth has a smaller amount of rare metals than it does oil. Try to keep up.

  • @wellscampbell9858

    @wellscampbell9858

    9 ай бұрын

    Well... to be honest, because lithium is a light and abundant element its chemistry is very straightforward and the processes that are used to refine it are well established. I suspect that any hydrochloric and sulphuric acids that are put into the process get largely consumed, and should the process result in an excess, they are both commodities and can easily be recovered and used elsewhere. Also, both of them are common household chemicals; H2SO4 is used to unclog drains, and most everyone carries a little bit of HCl with them at all times--it's stomach acid. I've never heard about uranium being used in any lithium chemistry,, and can't imagine how it would be involved.

  • @jonathannielson4406
    @jonathannielson44069 ай бұрын

    37:27 "We would never spend $1.2B on green washing." Translation: "We will happily spend 5% of our 2022 *profits alone* to try to stave off an existential threat to our industry"

  • @climeaware4814

    @climeaware4814

    9 ай бұрын

    you mean at the end "that to humanity" climate predictions that 83 million humans will die by 2100. I think its going to be much higher!

  • @caouette81

    @caouette81

    9 ай бұрын

    lol yup >

  • @aintkool

    @aintkool

    9 ай бұрын

    she cant refute the fact that you cannot trust her, their minimal investments and desire to “partner” with innovative green tech co’s is so they can 1) harvest patents, 2) monopolize the tech with those patents, 3) suck up the government contracts/incentives for themselves, and 4) slow the green energy transition to whatever timeline maximizes shareholder profit. WE CANNOT TRUST THESE GHOULS

  • @eleventy-seven

    @eleventy-seven

    9 ай бұрын

    Oil Companies should pay.

  • @Zoltan1251

    @Zoltan1251

    9 ай бұрын

    Sorry but beggers cant be choosers. As much as i hate oil industry, the planet is dying very very fast, if this gets oil industry into carbon neutral teritory, thats still a win. There is absolutely no time for politics at this stage.

  • @rhamlet5290
    @rhamlet52909 ай бұрын

    I really expected better from you. More research, more understanding. Just one example: Lithium is not dense. It is a light metal. That is part of the reason it is so good for batteries.

  • @Allin7days
    @Allin7days8 ай бұрын

    The days of fossil-based energy are numbered. Thanks to all the scientists and engineers, the true heroes of modern civilization...

  • @rtoguidver3651
    @rtoguidver36519 ай бұрын

    When it takes more energy to produce the energy you're using we're going backwards not forward...

  • @benkonczal4584
    @benkonczal45849 ай бұрын

    PLEASE tell me that someone out there is going to name their system: “Mr. Fusion”. That would really make my day 😉

  • @jc2delaga
    @jc2delaga9 ай бұрын

    Interesting and promising 👍

  • @michaelkuch5811
    @michaelkuch58119 ай бұрын

    All that effort for that output - what's the path to something practical? Show me that and MAYBE I'll get excited

  • @powdermcdust8335
    @powdermcdust83359 ай бұрын

    lol a 3/2 power ratio exluding the fact that the lasers use 300x the power not to mention all the power that bleeds off in the capictors or down the grid and neglecting all the fossil fuels it took to mine the resources for that giant facillity... Also don't forget the diamonds, or actually recovering the energy produced by the explosion... Oh and it would have to fire 864,000x faster. Pipe dream indeed.

  • @AbruptAvalanche

    @AbruptAvalanche

    9 ай бұрын

    My understanding is that the NIF's laser method is essentially a dead end for power generation. The facility was designed for nuclear weapon validation anyway. Other designs like the tokamak reactors show more promise, but we're still a long way off from fusion power plants.

  • @aguyfromnothere
    @aguyfromnothere9 ай бұрын

    Another “breakthrough” in fusion…..oh boy let me know when its real. We have had fusion in progress forever. I hope it happens so we can do even more.

  • @off6848

    @off6848

    9 ай бұрын

    I think it already is real. Fission to Fusion or Fusion to Fission hybrid reactors are very probable. But they continue to keep the public mystified about fusion by show casing Tokamak and K-Sun reactors but those types of sustained fusion reactors are just like a challenge game for nerds they aren't even being used in the way they should be to generate power. Again because nuclear energy is mystified to the public most people do not know that Nuclear Reactors are essentially mega huge steam turbine generators. The actual energy is not coming from the fission directly to the grid, so why do we need to keep presenting the bar for fusion to be long sustained reactions? We don't need to sustain hour long fusion reactions to simply create jump start power for fission which then super heats rods that dunk into water and create steam so what gives?

  • @MadScientist267

    @MadScientist267

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@break1722Way hotter than that and no you really don't want to tap into the rotational energy of Earth

  • @notahotshot

    @notahotshot

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@break1722 Yes, using heat from below ground is a thing. It's called geothermal energy. No, tapping into the rotation of the earth is not feasible, or a good idea. When you tap into the rotational energy of a spinning object you deplete that energy. It would take a very long time, but trying to draw energy directly from the rotation of the earth would slow the earth down. The more energy you try to capture, the greater the effect. And you can't spin the Earth back up to speed without putting that energy back.

  • @notahotshot

    @notahotshot

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@off6848 "Jump start power for fission" Just say you don't know what you're talking about and move on. We don't need fusion to jump start fission. Fission reactors already work, and can be started up at will. Energy from fusion will likely also be steam turbine generators energized by fusion reaction.

  • @JDAbelRN

    @JDAbelRN

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@break1722can't be done, Earth 🌎 is flat, sadly 😢.

  • @drmetal1634
    @drmetal16342 күн бұрын

    Shrinkflation is so high, even 60 minutes has gone to 40 minutes!

  • @beya_ba3
    @beya_ba38 ай бұрын

    how could the wires and copper assemblies of the target sustained such a high tempratures?

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