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David Kirtley: Nuclear Fusion, Plasma Physics, and the Future of Energy | Lex Fridman Podcast #485

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- The following is a conversation with David Kirtley, a nuclear

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engineer, expert on nuclear fusion, and the CEO of

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Helion Energy, a company working on building nuclear fusion

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reactors and have made incredible progress in a short period of time

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that make it seem possible, like we could actually get there

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as a civilization. This is exciting because nuclear

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fusion, if achieved commercially, will solve most of our energy

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needs in a clean, safe way, providing virtually unlimited clean

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electricity. The problem is that fusion is incredibly

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difficult to achieve. You need to heat hydrogen to over 100

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million degrees Celsius and contain it long enough for

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atoms to fuse. That's why the joke in the past has been

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that fusion is 30 years away and always will

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be. Just in case you're not familiar, let me

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clarify the difference between nuclear fusion and nuclear

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fission. By the way, I believe according to the excellent subreddit post by

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pmgoodbeer on this, the preferred pronunciation

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of the latter in the US is nuclear fission, like

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vision. And in the UK and other countries is nuclear fission, like

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mission. I prefer the nuclear fission pronunciation because

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America. So today's nuclear power plants

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use nuclear fission. They split apart heavy

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uranium atoms to release energy. Fusion does the opposite. It

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combines light hydrogen atoms together, the same reaction that

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powers the Sun and the stars. The result is that

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it's clean fuel from water, no long-lived radioactive waste,

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inherently safe because a fusion reactor can't melt down. If

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something goes wrong, the reactor simply stops. And there's

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no carbon emissions. On a more technical side,

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Helion uses a different approach to fusion than has

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traditionally been done. Most fusion efforts have used

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tokamaks, which are these giant donut-shaped magnetic containment

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chambers. Helion uses pulsed magnetoinertial

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fusion. David gets into the super technical

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physics and engineering details in this episode, which was

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fun and fascinating. I think it's important to

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remember that for all of human history, we've been

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limited by energy scarcity. And every major leap in

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civilization, agriculture, industrialization, information

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age, came in part from unlocking new energy

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sources. If someone is able to solve commercial

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fusion, we would enter a new era of energy abundance that

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fundamentally changes what's possible for us humans. I'm excited for the

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future, and I'm excited for super technical physics podcast episodes.

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This is a Lex Fridman podcast. To support it, please check out our sponsors in the

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description where you can also find links to contact me, ask

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questions, give feedback, and so on. And now, dear

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friends, here's David Kirtley. Let's start with the big picture. What is nuclear

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fusion, and maybe what is nuclear fission? Let's lay out the basics.

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- So fusion is what powers the universe. Fusion is what happens in

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stars and it's where the vast amount of energy

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that we use today here on Earth comes from the process of

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fusion. It also is what powers plants. And those

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plants become oil, and those become fossil fuels that

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then powers the rest of human civilization for

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the last 100 years. And so fusion really underpins a lot of what has enabled us as

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humans to go forward. However, ironically, we

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don't do it actively here on Earth to make electricity

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yet. And so fundamentally, what fusion is, is

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taking the most common elements in the universe: hydrogen and lightweight

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isotopes of hydrogen and helium, and fusing those together to

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make heavier elements. In that process, as you

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combine atomic nuclei and form heavier nuclei, those

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nuclei are slightly lighter than the sum of the

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parts. And that comes from a lot of the details of quantum mechanics

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and how those fundamental particles combine and interact.

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We also talk about the strong nuclear force that holds the

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atomic nuclei together as one of the fundamental forces involved in

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fusion. But that mass defect, E=MC², we know from Einstein, is also

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energy. And so, in that process, a tremendous amount of energy is

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released. And the actual reactions, I think, is a lot more interesting than simply it's a

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little bit lighter, and therefore, energy is released. But that's the fundamental

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process in fusion as you're bringing those lightweight atomic

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nuclei, those isotopes together. Fission is the exact

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opposite, where you're taking the heaviest elements in the universe:

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uranium, plutonium, things that are so heavy and have so

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many internal protons and neutrons and electrons, that they're

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barely held together at all. They're fundamentally unstable or

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radioactive, and those elements are very close to falling

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apart. And as they do that, if you take a uranium

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235 or a plutonium 239 nucleus, and you add

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something new, usually it's a neutron, a sub-atomic particle that's

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uncharged, that unstable, that very large nuclei will then break

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into pieces. Many pieces, a whole spectrum of pieces. But if you add up all of those

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pieces, they also have slightly less mass than the

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initial one did, the initial uranium or plutonium. And in that

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process, again, E=MC², a tremendous amount of energy is

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released. There's a very famous curve in atomic

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physics, fusion or fission, looking at the periodic table. Going from the

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lightest elements, hydrogen, to the heaviest elements, those uranium, plutonium,

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and others. And fusion happens up to iron. Iron is the

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magical point in between where lighter elements than

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iron fuse together, and heavier elements fission

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or are fissile and break apart and release energy.

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I think about and I look at that process in

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stars, in that our star is fundamentally an early stage

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star that's burning just hydrogens. But when it burns and does

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fusion, those hydrogens combine into heliums, and

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later stage stars can then burn those heliums and they can fuse those

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together to form even heavier elements and carbons. And those carbons can fuse

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together and form heavier elements. And that

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whole stellar process is something that inspires us at Helion

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to think about what are fusion fuels, not just the

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simplest ones, but more advanced fusion fuels that we see in stars throughout the

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- Okay, so there's a million things I want to say. First, zooming out to the biggest possible

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picture, if you look across hundreds of millions, billions of

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years, and all the, my opinion, alien

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civilizations that are out there, they're going to be powered

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likely by fusion. So our advanced intelligent civilization is powered by fusion in that

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the sun is our power plant.

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Then the other thing is the physics. Again, very basic, but you said E equals MC squared

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a couple times. Can you explain this equation?

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- E=MC squared is a fundamental relationship that a patent clerk, Einstein, discovered and unlocked

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an entire new realm of physics and engineering and has shown us

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engineering and has shown us

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atomic physics, what happens inside the nucleus, and unlocked our understanding of the universe

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and paved the way for many of the physics advancements that came after.

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That we think about mass as these particles. But in reality, at the same time, they're energy,

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and there's a direct quantitative relationship between how much energy is in all of that mass.

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And in fact, all of the energy that is released, even by atomic physics, certainly in atomic

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reactions, is E=MC squared. I think most people have heard of and are used to this.

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But also in chemistry and in chemical bonds, there is a change in mass. When you take a

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those chemical bonds, there is a change in mass. When you take a

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hydrogen and an oxygen and you burn them and you combine them into water, there's a change in mass.

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Now, that change per atom and per molecule is actually so small that it's extremely hard to

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molecule is actually so small that it's extremely hard to

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measure, but it's still there. That's the energy that is released, and you can quantify that.

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We use units of electron volts as a unit of what is the energy in atomic processes or chemical

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processes.

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- Can you also just speak to the different fuels that you mentioned, both on the fusion and

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fission side?

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...fission side? So uranium, plutonium for the fission, and then hydrogen isotopes for the fusion?

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- So for fission, uranium and plutonium, we don't make those nuclei. Those, right now for humanity,

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make those nuclei. Those, right now, for humanity,

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those have been made in the primordial universe through super-supernova and Big Bang

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and the initial formation of the universe where matter was created. And so we dig those up.

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We dig up uranium, plutonium out of the ground. And in fact, most plutonium we make from

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uranium, and we can talk about how to enrich uranium if we want to go down that road.

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But that's how we get those molecules and nuclei. For fusion materials, hydrogenic species, or

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hydrogens are primordial in the universe. Also, only the most common things that are in

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primordial in the universe. Also only the most common things

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the universe. The suns and stars are made up of hydrogens and heliums, and so the vast

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majority of atoms in the universe still are hydrogen.

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- So the basic fuel for fission is already in the ground, and then the basic fuel

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for fusion is everywhere.

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- Is everywhere, and we particularly use a type of hydrogen

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called deuterium, which is a heavier isotope

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of hydrogen. Hydrogen is typically one proton and one

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electron, atomic mass of one. Deuterium is an atomic mass of

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two, which is a proton, which is a charged particle, and it has a neutron in

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its nucleus, which is an uncharged particle. And so that's deuterium.

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As the fuel now, deuterium is also found in all water on Earth, in the

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water I'm drinking right now. It's in my body. It's in Coca-Cola. It's everywhere.

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And it's safe and clean and one of those fundamental particles that was

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born in the cosmos, and we estimate that in

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seawater here on Earth, we have, if we powered at our current

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use of electricity, all of humanity on fusion,

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somewhere between 100 million years and a billion years of

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fuel in hydrogen and deuterium here on Earth.

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- And how is that stored mostly?

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- Mostly that's just in water. Mostly it's a mix of, we

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call this actually heavy water, where you have normal water that you're

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used to. We talk about and you learn in school, is H2O, where

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there's two hydrogens and oxygen in a nucleus in the

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molecule. And deuterium, or heavy water, is

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D2O, two deuteriums and an oxygen. In reality,

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it's actually an interesting mix where you have some

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HDO, so a mix of hydrogen and deuterium. You also have other hydrogen

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but also in chemistry and in chemical bonds, that in those chemical bonds, there is a change in mass.

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- ...fission side? So uranium, plutonium for the fission, and then hydrogen isotopes for the fusion? In terms of fuel, is that correct to say?

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- That's correct to say at today's power level. I think what's interesting is

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the idea that as we deploy the same power source that powers the

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universe here on Earth as humans, can we do

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more? Can we have access to much more electricity, and much more

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energy and do really interesting things with that? And still there's

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large amounts, millions and millions of years of power even at

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much higher output power levels for humanity.

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- Yeah, so the moment we start running out of

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hydrogen and helium, that means we're doing some pretty incredible

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things with our technology. And then that technology is

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probably going to allow us to propagate out into the universe and then discover other sources.

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Because you can also get it on other planets.

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Whatever planets have water, it looks more and more likely like a lot of

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them do. What an incredible future, just out into the cosmos, nuclear power plants

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everywhere. Okay, so to linger on some of the technical stuff, you said

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strong nuclear force. So how exactly is the energy

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created? So how does the E=MC squared, the M go to the E infusion?

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- So in fusion, you take these lightweight isotopes like

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hydrogen and deuterium, and as you combine them and get them

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closer and closer together, some really interesting fundamental physics happens.

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So first these atomic nuclei are charged. They have an electric

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these atomic nuclei are charged. They have an electric

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charge, and they like charges repel. And I think everybody is

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familiar with that, where you take two positive charges, and you try to push them

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together, and the electromagnetic force between them repels them. So

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you have a force that's actually pushing against them. So in fusion,

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you work to get your fuel very hot, very, very high temperatures, 100

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million degree temperatures. And temperature really is kinetic energy. It's

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motion, it's velocity. So that these particles are moving so

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fast that even though they're coming together and there's this repulsive

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