Source: PhysOrg
Date: February 19, 2013
by: Bob Silberg
How would you like to replace your water heater with a nuclear reactor? That's what Joseph Zawodny, a senior scientist at NASA's Langley Research Center, hopes to help bring about. It would tap the enormous power of the atom to provide hot water for your bath, warm air for your furnace system, and more than enough electricity to run your house and, of course, your electric car.
If your thoughts have raced to Fukushima or Three Mile Island or Chernobyl, let me reassure you. Zawodny is not suggesting that you put that kind of reactor in your house. What he has in mind is a generator that employs a process called Low-Energy Nuclear Reactions. (The same process is sometimes called Lattice Energy Nuclear Reactions. We'll just call it LENR.) So what is LENR and how might it one day fill all your energy needs without risk of blowing up, melting down, or irradiating the neighbors?
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Sunday, February 24, 2013
2/19/2013 The nuclear reactor in your basement
Labels:
cold fusion,
Fukushima,
Joseph Zowodny,
LENR,
NASA,
nuclear fusion,
nuclear power,
nuclear reactor
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
2/12/2013 North Korea Confirms Nuclear Test
Monday, February 11, 2013
2/11/2013 North Korea conducts nuclear test: South Korea defense ministry
Source: Reuters
Date: Tue Feb 12, 2013 12:19am EST
(Reuters) - North Korea conducted a nuclear test on Tuesday, South Korea's defence ministry said, after seismic activity measuring 4.9 magnitude was registered by the U.S. Geological Survey.
The epicentre of the seismic activity, which was only one km below the Earth's surface, was close to the North's known nuclear test site.
...
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Editor's Note: Map of the earthquake appears below.
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Date: Tue Feb 12, 2013 12:19am EST
Japan's
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (R) speaks to media after attending a meeting
of Security Council of Japan at his official residence in Tokyo
February 12, 2013 after reports of North Korea's possible nuclear test.
Seismic activities detected at around 0300 GMT in North Korea may be the
result of a nuclear test, Japan's top government spokesman said on
Tuesday. REUTERS/Issei Kato LIVE COVERAGE: http://live.reuters.com/ |
(Reuters) - North Korea conducted a nuclear test on Tuesday, South Korea's defence ministry said, after seismic activity measuring 4.9 magnitude was registered by the U.S. Geological Survey.
The epicentre of the seismic activity, which was only one km below the Earth's surface, was close to the North's known nuclear test site.
...
Read the rest here
Editor's Note: Map of the earthquake appears below.
View Live Ustream Radiation Detectors in a larger map
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