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Technically, such a catalyst has been discovered: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muon-catalyzed_fusionIt has a serious problem, though: muons are highly unstable.
In the novel Currents of Space By Isaac Asimov the element Carbon in space could act as a nuclear catalyst and caused Florina's Sun to go nova.In chemistry catalysts are used to lower the energy or improve the conditions under which chemical reactions can occur.While I understand this was fictional the question is why have physicists not tried to discover some kind of nuclear catalyst to lower the Coulomb potential for fusion to occur more easily?At the moment they are doing a hard slough for 'always 30 years away' nuclear fusion and reached a dead end.The adblock is very annoying even after you disable it. keeps popping up on firefox if you scroll the same page up or down...ridiculous. Surely you must have received plenty money from the drug companies sponsors by now. no need to get greedy.
Quote from: championoftruth on 18/11/2022 16:34:38In the novel Currents of Space By Isaac Asimov the element Carbon in space could act as a nuclear catalyst and caused Florina's Sun to go nova.In chemistry catalysts are used to lower the energy or improve the conditions under which chemical reactions can occur.While I understand this was fictional the question is why have physicists not tried to discover some kind of nuclear catalyst to lower the Coulomb potential for fusion to occur more easily?At the moment they are doing a hard slough for 'always 30 years away' nuclear fusion and reached a dead end.The adblock is very annoying even after you disable it. keeps popping up on firefox if you scroll the same page up or down...ridiculous. Surely you must have received plenty money from the drug companies sponsors by now. no need to get greedy.To lower the nucleon resistance would seem to be creating energy from nothing, thus breaking the law of conservation of energy. If a catalyst did manage to lower the energy threshold would it have to compensate by releasing less energy ?
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 19/11/2022 14:23:37Quote from: championoftruth on 18/11/2022 16:34:38In the novel Currents of Space By Isaac Asimov the element Carbon in space could act as a nuclear catalyst and caused Florina's Sun to go nova.In chemistry catalysts are used to lower the energy or improve the conditions under which chemical reactions can occur.While I understand this was fictional the question is why have physicists not tried to discover some kind of nuclear catalyst to lower the Coulomb potential for fusion to occur more easily?At the moment they are doing a hard slough for 'always 30 years away' nuclear fusion and reached a dead end.The adblock is very annoying even after you disable it. keeps popping up on firefox if you scroll the same page up or down...ridiculous. Surely you must have received plenty money from the drug companies sponsors by now. no need to get greedy.To lower the nucleon resistance would seem to be creating energy from nothing, thus breaking the law of conservation of energy. If a catalyst did manage to lower the energy threshold would it have to compensate by releasing less energy ?same with chemical reactions. neutrons and muons can do this but both are quite inconvenient to use.
Quote from: championoftruth on 20/11/2022 20:53:15Quote from: Petrochemicals on 19/11/2022 14:23:37Quote from: championoftruth on 18/11/2022 16:34:38In the novel Currents of Space By Isaac Asimov the element Carbon in space could act as a nuclear catalyst and caused Florina's Sun to go nova.In chemistry catalysts are used to lower the energy or improve the conditions under which chemical reactions can occur.While I understand this was fictional the question is why have physicists not tried to discover some kind of nuclear catalyst to lower the Coulomb potential for fusion to occur more easily?At the moment they are doing a hard slough for 'always 30 years away' nuclear fusion and reached a dead end.The adblock is very annoying even after you disable it. keeps popping up on firefox if you scroll the same page up or down...ridiculous. Surely you must have received plenty money from the drug companies sponsors by now. no need to get greedy.To lower the nucleon resistance would seem to be creating energy from nothing, thus breaking the law of conservation of energy. If a catalyst did manage to lower the energy threshold would it have to compensate by releasing less energy ?same with chemical reactions. neutrons and muons can do this but both are quite inconvenient to use.Not really, if you lower the Columb barrier it would infarct create energy unless you are consuming other particles etc that have taken energy to create, catalysts in chemical terms are not consumed, nor does it take less energy in the presence of a catalyst to form an energy requiring molecular bond, it just makes the process more efficient so to speak, there is less waste energy or even the reaction should not take place without a catalyst at all.As for catalysts to increase efficiency of the fusion chain to make it self sustaining a non consumable chemical or nucleon presence I cannot think how to other than the containment of the heat etc. Perhaps a larger enough fusion mass. What ever you use to be considered a catalyst it must be non consumable and cannot violate the laws of physics.
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-role-of-Palladium-as-a-catalyst-for-the_fig15_236273071
also why is everyone so ignorant that ONLY 14.5 kg of tritium exists worldwide and has a 1/2 life of only 12 years..
Quote from: championoftruth on 19/11/2022 13:57:20https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-role-of-Palladium-as-a-catalyst-for-the_fig15_236273071It looks like that article is discussing cold fusion in the context of a non-standard physics theory. I would therefore be cautious in putting too much stock in it. As far as I am aware, there haven't been any consistently replicated cold fusion experiments of the type you are suggesting that use palladium.Quote from: championoftruth on 20/11/2022 22:02:41also why is everyone so ignorant that ONLY 14.5 kg of tritium exists worldwide and has a 1/2 life of only 12 years..There is a possible work-around to this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breeding_blanketAs the field advances, perhaps we can advance to deuterium-only fusion. Or we may be able to mine helium-3 from the Moon to use as fusion fuel.
Allegedly.
The assertion you are going to get tritium from the moon is absurd.
do you really expect to find nuggets labeled tritium on the moon?
The Currents of Space
Palladium