Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
Richard Aiken
(25 Jul 2022 19:02 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant Thomas Jones-Low (26 Jul 2022 01:16 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
Richard Aiken
(02 Aug 2022 19:09 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
Phil Pugliese
(02 Aug 2022 21:02 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
Thomas RUX
(03 Aug 2022 22:22 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(07 Aug 2022 22:46 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(07 Aug 2022 22:53 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
Richard Aiken
(08 Aug 2022 04:49 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(09 Aug 2022 07:07 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Heavy Water As Fusion Drive Propellant
Richard Aiken
(10 Aug 2022 09:22 UTC)
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On 7/25/2022 3:02 PM, Richard Aiken - raikenclw at gmail.com (via tml list) wrote: > Hey All, > > IMTU, maneuver drives are either Orion drives (the basic model for those old > asteroid colony vessels which settled Known Space,ban advanced > fusion-boosted/inertially-damped model for modern in-system freightliners) or > fusion torch rockets (for most remaining ships). > > For the fusion torch rockets, I have been intending to use water as the standard > propellant, with "refined" being distilled water and "unrefined" being tap water > (or worse). But I am curious if so-called "heavy water" - created in pursuit of > the nuclear bomb (although I'm not sure why) - might make a better "refined" > fuel. In particular, it would justify why "refined" is so much more costly than > "unrefined." > > Thoughts? > In the real world so-called heavy water is simply normal water with one or both of the hydrogen atoms replaced with deuterium, the heavy hydrogen. If you're thinking that feeding extra deuterium into the fusion reaction to give it a little extra kick, it may be an interesting idea. But I would think the general system would want to separate out the deuterium for direct use as fuel, and plain water as a reaction mass. -- Thomas Jones-Low Work: xxxxxx@softstart.com Home: xxxxxx@gmail.com