Sci-Tech: Ultra-dense deuterium packs tightly

A  group led by Prof. Leif Holmlid at the  University of Gothenburg, Sweden has created a really bizarre material:

Ultra-dense deuterium may be the nuclear fuel of the future

Material that is a hundred thousand times heavier than water and more dense than the core of the Sun is being produced at the University of Gothenburg. The scientists working with this material are aiming for an energy process that is both more sustainable and less damaging to the environment than the nuclear power used today.

Imagine a material so heavy that a cube with sides of length 10 cm weights 130 tonnes, a material whose density is significantly greater than the material in the core of the Sun. Such a material is being produced and studied by scientists in Atmospheric Science at the Department of Chemistry, the University of Gothenburg.

Towards commercial use

So far, only microscopic amounts of the new material have been produced. New measurements that have been published in two scientific journals, however, have shown that the distance between atoms in the material is much smaller than in normal matter. Leif Holmlid, Professor in the Department of Chemistry, believes that this is an important step on the road to commercial use of the material.

The material is produced from heavy hydrogen, also known as deuterium, and is therefore known as “ultra-dense deuterium”. It is believed that ultra-dense deuterium plays a role in the formation of stars, and that it is probably present in giant planets such as Jupiter.

An efficient fuel

So what can this super-heavy material be used for?

“One important justification for our research is that ultra-dense deuterium may be a very efficient fuel in laser driven nuclear fusion. It is possible to achieve nuclear fusion between deuterium nuclei using high-power lasers, releasing vast amounts of energy”, says Leif Holmlid.

The laser technology has long been tested on frozen deuterium, known as “deuterium ice”, but results have been poor. It has proved to be very difficult to compress the deuterium ice sufficiently for it to attain the high temperature required to ignite the fusion.

Energy source of the future

Ultra-dense deuterium is a million times more dense than frozen deuterium, making it relatively easy to create a nuclear fusion reaction using high-power pulses of laser light.

“If we can produce large quantities of ultra-dense deuterium, the fusion process may become the energy source of the future. And it may become available much earlier than we have thought possible”, says Leif Holmlid.

“Further, we believe that we can design the deuterium fusion such that it produces only helium and hydrogen as its products, both of which are completely non-hazardous. It will not be necessary to deal with the highly radioactive tritium that is planned for use in other types of future fusion reactors, and this means that laser-driven nuclear fusion as we envisage it will be both more sustainable and less damaging to the environment than other methods that are being developed.”

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Deuterium – brief facts

Deuterium is an isotope of hydrogen that is found in large quantities in water, more than one atom per ten thousand hydrogen atoms has a deuterium nucleus. The isotope is denoted “2H” or “D”, and is normally known as “heavy hydrogen”. Deuterium is used in a number of conventional nuclear reactors in the form of heavy water (D2O), and it will probably also be used as fuel in fusion reactors in the future.

Video: Freeman Dyson talks about mandatory cheapness, Noah’s Ark Eggs, warm-blooded plants, and more

I’ve been watching some of the many excellent videos from the Starship Century Symposium. For example, the video below shows Freeman Dyson‘s very interesting talk in which he first discussed key factors in  opening up the solar system to humanity in the coming decades and then moving out into interstellar space in the coming centuries. Lots of fascinating ideas presented. I particularly liked his emphasis on “cheapness” for space transports and other space hardware because affordability is crucial if large scale migration into and development of the solar system is to ever take place.

Mars: Signs of an ancient sea + The 2020 rover begins to take shape

A group at Caltech has been studying images from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter of a 100-square-kilometer area with ridge-like features that lies next to a region called Aeolis Dorsa that has been speculated to be a dried-up ocean bottom. They see evidence that the features of the ridges match well  that seen for channels of river deltas going into seas on earth. So this supports the possibility that there was in fact an ocean there long ago.

ML-MarsOcean-Delta-NEWS-WEBComparison of exhumed delta in sedimentary rocks on Mars (left) with a modern
delta on
Earth (right). On the left, a shaded relief map shows elevated, branching,
lobate features in
Aeolis Dorsa, Mars, interpreted as resistant channel deposits that
make up an ancient delta. 
These layered, cross-cutting features are typical of
channelized sedimentary deposits on Earth
and here are indicative of a
coastal delta environment.

Credit: DiBiase et al./Journal of Geophysical Research/2013 and USGS/NASA Landsat

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Perhaps the next NASA rover to go to Mars in 2020 will examine Aeolis Dorsa. Recently NASA released details of the design of the rover, which will be based on the Curiosity design. The scientific instruments will be chosen in a competitive process. The primary goal will be to look for signs of past life. The vehicle will also gather up samples that a future mission with a lander and return vehicle could take back to earth for closer examination.

Mars 2020 Rover
This video explains the science goals of the mission:
http://youtu.be/cU5MWtEs4L4

Space policy roundup – July.17.13 [Update 3]

The Future Space Leaders Foundation

is hosting its second annual one-day event on Capitol Hill covering cross-cutting issues in space. Future Space 2013 will raise grant funds to support educational programs and networking opportunities for graduate students and young professionals.

Several politicians and NASA and Defense Dept.  people will be participating. Find posts about the presentations from Jeff Foust on Twitter.

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Some space policy links:

Update:

Update 2:

Update 3:

ISS spacewalk canceled after water leak in spacesuit

At the start of an EVA on the International Space Station today by Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano and Amercian Christopher Cassidy, water soon began to build up inside Parmitano’s helmet from a leak and they had to cancel the EVA and return quickly to the airlock. The cause of the lead is not yet understood  : Spacewalk aborted by spacesuit water leak – Spaceflight Now

Here was a NASA briefing on the aborted EVA:

Everyone can participate in space