Posted on 09/17/2003 8:18:21 PM PDT by wafflehouse
LOGAN A widespread belief among physicists nowadays is that modern science requires squadrons of scientists and wildly expensive equipment.
Craig Wallace and Philo T. Farnsworth are putting the lie to all that.
Wallace, a baby-faced tennis player fresh out of Spanish Fork High School, had almost the entire physics faculty of Utah State University hovering (and arguing) over an apparatus he had cobbled together from parts salvaged from junk yards and charity drops.
The apparatus is nothing less than the sine qua non of modern science: a nuclear fusion reactor, based on the plans of Utah's own Philo Farnsworth, the inventor of television.
The reactor sat on a table with an attached vacuum pump wheezing away. A television monitor showed what was inside: a glowing ball of gas surrounded by a metal helix.
The ball is, literally, a small sun, where an electric field forces deuteron ions (a form of hydrogen) to gather, bang together and occasionally fuse, spitting out a neutron each time fusion occurs.
"Here I am with this thing here," Wallace mused, looking at his surroundings. "Who'da thought?"
Wallace and Farnsworth are much alike. Both are (or were Farnsworth died in 1971) tinkerers. While Wallace was in grade school, his mother got a flat tire while he was riding with her. He fixed it. For his part, Farnsworth began improvising electric motors at a young age. Both went on to bigger and better things.
"He was never motivated to take science," said Wallace's father, Allen Wallace. "It was really the tinkering that motivated him."
When Craig was a sophomore in high school, browsing the Internet he discovered that Farnsworth had come up with a way to create deuteron ion plasma, a prerequisite to fusion.
While it was not good for production of energy (the source of much embarrassment to the University of Utah in the cold fusion debacle in the late 1980s), Farnsworth's design did emit neutrons, a useful tool for commercial applications and scientific experimentation.
"He (Farnsworth) was after the Holy Grail of excess energy, but everyone agrees that it's mostly useful as a neutron generator," Allen Wallace said.
About 30 such devices exist around the country, owned by such entities as Los Alamos National Laboratories, NASA and universities. ("I bet I'm the only high school student that has one," Craig Wallace said.)
Looking at Farnsworth's plans for the first time, Craig and his father both had the same thought: Now there's a science project.
They set to work. They found a neutron detector in an Idaho Falls scrap metal yard. Craig built a neutron modulator (which slows down the emitted neutrons so they can be detected) out of a few hundred spare CDs. They found a broken turbo molecular pump lying forgotten at Deseret Industries.
Too poor to buy pricey deuterium gas, Craig bought a container of deuterium oxide, or heavy water, for 20 bucks and came up with a way to make it a gas and get rid of the accompanying oxygen by passing it over heated magnesium filings.
Not bad for a backyard amateur who considered himself more mechanic than scientist.
"I teased him that he was now officially a science geek," Allen Wallace said.
One professor Friday stood nervously away from Wallace's reactor which is notably free from any shielding but he needn't have worried: Wallace's detector measures 36 neutrons per minute just in background radiation from space, and the device's usual output adds only four neutrons per minute. People in airplanes absorb much more than that.
It took two years of gathering materials and six months of assembly, but the final product actually, incongruously, works.
"(This was) the day I achieved a Poisser plasma reaction," Wallace wrote next to a picture of the glowing ball. "Probably the coolest thing I have ever seen."
Others thought it was cool, too. Wallace began winning contests local, state, national culminating in second place in the International Intel Science and Engineering Fair last May in Cleveland. He's now beginning work on a USU physics degree.
"The whole thing combines chemistry, engineering, physics," he said. "Put them all together and you come out with something pretty sweet."
Farnsworth would have been proud.
Wrong. Cold fusion does not give neutrons. At the recent MIT demonstration of cold fusion, FReepers were present, and several presented, including a demo.
Just damn.
If you want on the new list, FReepmail me. This IS a high-volume PING list...
Oh, right. "You can find that quantum flux regulator behind the molecular pump over there..."
Anybody remember the late 70's TV series "Salvage" with Andy Griffith?
"I'm gonna go up to the moon, get all the junk they left up there, bring it back an' sell it..."
Dream on. Scientists have been seeking this elusive device for decades. The latest research demonstrates that the South Florida voters are devolving faster than new developments can be created. According to an article here the latest test with punch cards had the residents from South Florida voting the Orangutan from "Every Which Way but Loose" the next President of the United States.
One promising invention actually had the candidates standing on a platform. Apparently the voters were supposed to go up to the platform and pull the nose of the candidate they favored, who would then drop a token into a box indicating the vote. In a test run between Al Gore and a Trash Collector, the toilet was flushed 1700 times, thereby winning the election.
I doubt we will see such an invention in our lifetimes.
Shalom.
Modulator? Now that would be cool. Try moderator. Much more pedestrian, but probably more accurate.
Too poor to buy pricey deuterium gas, Craig bought a container of deuterium oxide, or heavy water, for 20 bucks...
20 bucks for a "container" of D2O? I wonder how big that container was? Sounds like a pretty good price to me.
Wallace's detector measures 36 neutrons per minute just in background radiation from space, and the device's usual output adds only four neutrons per minute.
Not to denigrate the kid's work, because it's obvious he worked hard and was creative and learned something, but is anyone else out there wondering about the counting statistics here? It appears that the increase in count rate is within the expected uncertainty just based on Poisson statistics, unless he ran a lot of tests to reduce the sizable of the uncertainty bands. That isn't clear from what is discussed, but I assume he had to have done that otherwise the judges would have questioned the results on that basis (I know I would have). Maybe he ran a very long counting interval and normalized it to cpm. But in that case drift becomes an issue (not necessarily a fatal one) with pulse counting.
The downside, of course, is that a backlash may occur, as many boys who also have scientific aspirations will feel cheated as they watch girls given headstarts and extra aid. There are many, many school and after-school programs in science that are girls only, but not as many which are co-ed, and none which are boys-only.
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