Compact Reactor:
Pharis E. Williams

Abstract.   Weyl's Gauge Principle of 1929 has been used to establish
Weyl's Quantum Principle (WQP) that requires that the Weyl scale factor
should be unity. It has been shown that the WQP requires the following:
quantum mechanics must be used to determine system states; the
electrostatic potential must be non-singular and quantified; interactions
between particles with different electric charges (i.e. electron and
proton) do not obey Newton’s Third Law at sub-nuclear separations, and
nuclear particles may be much different than expected using the standard
model. The above WQP requirements lead to a potential fusion reactor
wherein deuterium nuclei are preferentially fused into helium nuclei.
Because the deuterium nuclei are preferentially fused into helium nuclei at
temperatures and energies lower than specified by the standard model there
is no harmful radiation as a byproduct of this fusion process. Therefore, a
reactor using this reaction does not need any shielding to contain such
radiation. The energy released from each reaction and the absence of
shielding makes the deuterium-plus-deuterium-to-helium (DDH) reactor very
compact when compared to other reactors, both fission and fusion types.
Moreover, the potential energy output per reactor weight and the absence of
harmful radiation makes the DDH reactor an ideal candidate for space power.
The logic is summarized by which the WQP requires the above conditions that
make the prediction of DDH possible. The details of the DDH reaction will
be presented along with the specifics of why the DDH reactor may be made to
cause two deuterium nuclei to preferentially fuse to a helium nucleus. The
presentation will also indicate the calculations needed to predict the
reactor temperature as a function of fuel loading, reactor size, and
desired output and will include the progress achieved to date.

http://www.physicsandbeyond.com/CompactReactor.html

pdf  format:
http://www.physicsandbeyond.com/pdf/Compact%20Reactor.pdf

Harry

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