Bussard Fusion One Step Closer

The team working to duplicate Dr. Bussard’s fusion technique has had some results (emphasis added):

The team has turned in its final report, and it’s been double-checked by a peer-review panel, [team leader Richard] Nebel told me today. Although he couldn’t go into the details, he said the verdict was positive.

There’s nothing in there that suggests this will not work,” Nebel said. “That’s a very different statement from saying that it will work.”

By and large, the EMC2 results fit Bussard’s theoretical predictions, Nebel said. That could mean Polywell fusion would actually lead to a power-generating reaction. But based on the 10-month, shoestring-budget experiment, the team can’t rule out the possibility that a different phenomenon is causing the observed effects.

“If you want to say something absolutely, you have to say there’s no other explanation,” Nebel said. The review board agreed with that conservative assessment, he said.

The good news, from Nebel’s standpoint, is that the WB-7 experiment hasn’t ruled out the possibility that Polywell fusion could actually serve as a low-cost, long-term energy solution. “If this thing was absolutely dead in the water, we would have found out,” he said.

Polywell Fusion Not Quite Dead Yet

It looks like Dr. Bussard’s dream of practical and safe fusion power (including an enormously efficient space drive) via his Polywell design has not quite yet been abandoned. IMC2 has a new contract from the US Navy to investigate his designs further.

This must mean that some positive results came from the summer’s work, even though they have not yet been published.

One cannot overstate the positive effects this would have on the human condition were it to be successful. Practially unlimited energy from seawater and borax! No radiation, no nuclear waste, no air pollution or oil wars, voyages of mere weeks to all the planets of the solar system…