Posted on 01/15/2005 11:02:49 AM PST by ckilmer
January 12, 2005 03:30 PM US EST
by The Acoustic Fusion Technology Energy Consortium
GRASS VALLEY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 12, 2005--
CONSORTIUM FORMED TO STUDY ACOUSTIC FUSION; COULD BE ALTERNATIVE TO OIL, GAS, COAL AND NUCLEAR POWER
The Acoustic Fusion Technology Energy Consortium (AFTEC) has been formed by leading academic and commercial institutions to research and develop acoustic inertial confinement fusion (AICF) and its related science, technologies, and equipment. AFTEC's five founders are (alphabetically): Boston University; Impulse Devices, Inc.; Purdue University; University of Mississippi; and University of Washington Center for Industrial and Medical Ultrasound.
Dr. Wylene Dunbar, Director of AFTEC, today announced the group saying, "Acoustic fusion has an excellent chance of becoming the alternative to oil, gas, coal and nuclear energy for the world's electricity -- if it is funded appropriately."
"If AICF delivers on its potential, the impact would be enormous. Fusion could produce electricity with a process that yields virtually no pollution--just ordinary helium and heat," Dr. Dunbar observed. "With acoustic fusion, the fuel is essentially water, and the cost to build and operate a plant would be a fraction of other alternative energy facilities. Furthermore, the timetable for acoustic fusion is arguably far shorter than all other paths to fusion."
In AICF, sound waves bombard a liquid such as heavy water, to create tiny void "bubbles" or "cavities" of deuterium a/k/a heavy hydrogen. This produces very high temperatures and densities that, when high enough, fuse the heavy hydrogen into helium. That fusion releases enormous heat that could be used to create steam and drive a turbine to produce electricity.
An emerging field, acoustic inertial confinement fusion can already lay claim to significant progress: A multi-institution team led by Dr. Rusi Taleyarkhan has twice documented fusion reactions taking place in an AICF reactor, with the results of those seminal experiments published in two prestigious, peer-reviewed journals, Science 295, 1868 (2002) and Physical Review E 69, 036109 (2004), and receiving publicity worldwide. Under the direction of its President, Ross Tessien, Impulse Devices has recently made available the first commercial research reactor for AICF.
Scientists leading AFTEC's research are preeminent in the field: Dr. R. Glynn Holt, Associate Professor, Department of Aerospace/Mechanical Engineering, Boston University; Dr. D. Felipe Gaitan, (discoverer of single-bubble sonoluminescence, a phenomenon closely related to acoustic fusion research), Chief Scientific Officer, Impulse Devices, Inc.; Dr. Rusi Taleyarkhan, The Ardent Bement Jr. Professor of Nuclear Engineering, Purdue University, and part-time Distinguished staff at a National Laboratory; Dr. Henry Bass, Director of the National Center for Physical Acoustics, University of Mississippi, and F.A.P. Barnard Distinguished Professor of Physics & Astronomy; and Dr. Lawrence A. Crum (leading researcher in the field of high intensity focused ultrasound and past president of The Acoustical Society of America) Professor of Bioengineering and Electrical Engineering and Director, Center for Industrial and Medical Ultrasound, Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington.
Members of AFTEC will work as a team to investigate acoustic fusion, Dr. Dunbar noted, and will consult with National Laboratory scientists for independent verification of positive results, as they are achieved.
"All of the scientists involved with this research appreciate that acoustic fusion is a relatively new field and one that has, so far, received little funding support," Dr. Dunbar stated. "Nevertheless, given AICF's potential for creating a limitless, nonpolluting source of sustainable energy, as well as myriad other applications, they also agree that the investigation of acoustic fusion is critically important and deserving of high priority."
Dr. Dunbar received her Ph.D. in Philosophy from Vanderbilt University and her J.D. from the University of Mississippi.
this one looks like the right stuff.
ping
Very lawyerly press release. It has crackpot and investment scam written all over it.
Mahavishnu Orchestra Unplugged?
My neighbor has a teenage son, and from the loud noises that come from his stereo I'm pretty sure he's already perfected acoustic fusion.
Does this group play Blues or New Alternative?
Yes it does. Especially from Grass Valley, CA. Been there,....
I think this is a variation on "sonoluminescence" which is a real phenomenon. I'd be surprised if it could be scaled up to produce useful amounts of energy...but I've been surprised before.
Grass Valley, Ca. is where Ricky Williams[the hemp smoking football player}is currently taking "alternative" medicine and healing courses.
My home town. I know that they had large electronic industry up there when I left. Not surprising that this would come from there.
this is actually a second draft of the press release. I edited out the parts that the second draft indicated needed editing.
http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20050112005029&newsLang=en
Heh...
Deuterium water is about as present in the oceans as free hydrogen in the atmosphere, which means it will have to be collected from the seas or manufatured; I'm afraid this might add a few trillion to the cost of raw materials.
Grass Valley is a kind of "live and let live" town. That's both its charm and its curse. One never knows if one is dealing with the sane, the insane, or those about to go insane, in Grass Valley.
Not to mention the cost/source of the (presumably) ultrasound energy...
Acoustic Fusion?
Mahavishnu Orchestra Unplugged?
yo yo monkey moonbeam blog
when you don't know the answer: think first. talk second.
Manufactured; manufaturing is what happens to the press releases.
Great fishing though in Little Grass reservoir.We used to love to camp there on the weekends.
Never heard of these folks. But then, it was a small group of former GE engineers who left Trenton NJ in the early 60's and founded Grass Valley Group. So who knows?
My neighbor has a teenage son, and from the loud noises that come from his stereo I'm pretty sure he's already perfected acoustic fusion.
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likely this technology relies on 6th graders learning to play the violin. Nah That involves air. This one needs sound to travel hard through water. aligators vibrate the water. The whole surface of a pond vibrates when the male calls. well no. that's cold fusion.
There's something going on here call NUCLEAR CAVITATION.
Makes my teeth hurt just thinking about it.
Oh, don't get me wrong, I like Grass Valley, its beautiful and I was once going to live there. After building a few houses in GV, I decided things might not be so confusing elsewhere. The old hippies, the retired public servants, with too much time and sense of entitlement on their hands, tended to complicate the simple. Although Sputhe Engineering makes some darn good Harley engine cases. Things ain't all bad.
ACOUSTIC FUSION
Does this group play Blues or New Alternative?
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does sound more like New Alternative
BTTT!!!!!!
It has crackpot and investment scam written all over it.
Yes it does. Especially from Grass Valley, CA. Been there,....
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me too.
however, there are way too many respected/respecatable names attached to this pr to dismiss it lightly.
Yes. It's a great place to visit.
http://www.ornl.gov/info/press_releases/get_press_release.cfm?ReleaseNumber=mr20020305-00
http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/bltaleyarkhan.htm
Original research at Oak Ridge National Lab
Dr. Rusi Taleyarkhan
A press conference will be held tomorrow by Mr. Paul Shannon, the senior representative of the main sponsor of the research group, C Systems Inc.
Tonight, however, they are going to have a party at their working lab in a Chicago industrial park.
I left California 36 years ago and never moved back. My parents left Grass Valley for Wyoming just two years ago.
Now I can take a vacation without going near California. Suits me fine.
OK, give me all your money and I'll invest it with them on this project.
Public release date: 4-Mar-2002
[ Print Article | E-mail Article | Close Window ]
Contact: Lisa Onaga
Lonaga@aaas.org
202-326-7088
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Fusion in a flash?
Science researchers report nuclear emissions from tiny, super-hot collapsing bubbles
The embargo on this research by Taleyarkhan et al., and the associated Perspective by Becchetti, has been lifted by the AAAS News & Information Office.
Please Note: Important updated information on super-hot collapsing bubbles is now available. Click here, or contact Lisa Onaga at 202-326-6440, lonaga@aaas.org or scipak@aaas.org.
Whenever additional information on forthcoming papers is made available to the AAAS News & Information Office, an update is posted to EurekAlert!, within the Science Press Package site. Journalists are encouraged to check the site again for any updates before finalizing stories.

So it's all your fault, isn't it! You left and let the New Yorkers move in to make life hell for the rest of us.
(/sarcasm-humor)....;^)
R.I. Nigmatulin; R.P. Taleyarkhan; R.T. Lahey
Proceedings of the I MECH E Part A Journal of Power and Energy, 1 September 2004, vol. 218, no. 5, pp. 345-364(20)
This paper extends the experimental and numerical results presented previously and addresses the major criticisms raised. In addition, the most recent results are discussed. In acoustic cavitation experiments with chilled (~0°8 C) deuterated acetone (C3D6O), the production of tritium and 2.45 MeV neutrons [which are characteristic of deuterium-deuterium (D D) fusion] was observed during vapour bubble implosions in an acoustic pressure field. Similar experiments with deuterated acetone at room temperature ( 20.8 C) and control experiments with normal acetone (C3H6O), at both 0 and 20.8 C, showed no statistically significant increases in either tritium level or neutron emissions. Numerical simulations of the processes that account for the shock waves generated in the liquid and within the collapsing bubbles supported these experimental observations and showed that high densities and temperatures (>108 K) may be achieved during bubble cloud implosions, yielding the conditions required for D D nuclear fusion reactions. The present paper treats the bubble fusion experiments and theoretical results in greater detail than was possible in the previous publications, contains some refinements, addresses some important questions raised by reviewers and critics and discusses possible applications of this interesting phenomenon.
however, there are way too many respected/respecatable names attached to this pr to dismiss it lightly.
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OK, give me all your money and I'll invest it with them on this project.
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all your base are belong to us
http://rmitz.org/AYB3.swf
Heavy water only costs about $28 a pound.
Is acoustic fusion what happened to my hearing at the one Stones concert I've ever attended?

acoustic cavitation or acoustic fusion would both make for good first tries for jazz fusion band names. but soon I think the guys would realize there were just too many syllables going on there. Good band names are usually no more one or two syllyables like: FinK, PEon,ChiPSet,Toad
Daria Musk Trio - Acoustic Fusion
A soulful acoustic fusion of rock, funk, folk, reggae and jazz. A high energy, groove-based, virtuostic blend of sound. "With Daria Musk Trio it's all about playing live." While currently working in the studio creating their first fully-produced album, The Daria Musk Trio is truly a live performance band. Since their formation they've been on a continuous touring schedule. Captivating audiences everywhere they go, their shows exhibit solid musicianship, exciting stage presence and fresh upbeat songs that range from high energy to soulful lush melodies. Starting out in coffee houses DM3 has now expanded to large and exclusive venues throughout Connecticut and New York City. With a steadily growing fanbase, and radio play stretching from Connecticut Universities to WLIR, they're spreading their sound. They have been welcomed onto the stages of CBGB's, The Baggot Inn, The Knitting Factory, The Triad Theatre, and many more. DM3 was also recently featured at a meeting of The Songwriter's Hall of Fame.
DM3 consists of singer/songwriter/guitarist Daria, acoustic-electric bassist Rich, and fusion drummer J.
website: http://www.dariamusktrio.com
email: info@dariamusktrio.com
LOL! That's cool. Did you have a creative hand in that? I noticed the picture of Bill Gates, as a "young nerd, arrested". Perhaps all our base do belong to him. Apple, notwithstanding.
WildTurkey
Last time I went to CBGB's was two decades ago. At that time the music they covered was all heavy metal hard rock. I got into a drunken brawl out side. They'd seen that sort of thing before. Often in fact. It was expected.
Sounds like times have changed a bit there.
Anchored by the old Grass Valley Group which got sold. There's still a large number of Silicon Refugees up there, telecommuting and doing small start-ups.
no that's been around for awhile. I first saw it a couple months back. likely posted at fr. if you lose the link you can find it by going to google and typing in ...
"all your base are belong to us"
IMO, that's the bottom line here. Somebody wants a grant for something that may or may not work.
Carolyn
It shouldn't be a surprise that nuclear fusion reactions can be be caused this way. In some modern nuclear bombs, the initiator, the device that generates the initial neutrons that begin the chain reaction, uses the energy of the chemical implosion to fuse deuterium at the center of the bomb. The average temperature created by the imploding shock wave is much less than required to sustain a fusion reaction, however. But the bell-shaped temperature distribution guarantees that a few atoms at the higher tail of the curve will have a high enough temerature to fuse and generate a few neutrons while the mass is still critical.
"-- if it is funded appropriately."
IMO, that's the bottom line here. Somebody wants a grant for something that may or may not work.
Carolyn
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some of the best money the feds spend is on basic research--the sort of work work that doesn't have a direct commercial application--within a 2-3 year time frame. which is the outer boundary of most private R&D investment.
federal seed money can be found at the base of most industries today.
Last fall the cold fusion people came back to the DOE with their experimental results again. and again they were rejected--because the results were sufficiently reproduceable. in this case it looks like the results are reproduceable.
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