Eric Lerner Presents Focus Fusion at Google Tech Talks
See Eric Lerner presenting focus fusion at the Google Tech Talks on October 3. Click here for the Google Tech Talk video.

Read the Abstract of the talk below, and click here for the talk itself.
ABSTRACT
To bring the whole of humanity up to the living standards of the developed world requires a new source of energy that is clean, inexhaustible and much cheaper than any existing source—fossil, nuclear, solar or wind. Fusion with hydrogen-boron fuel, which allows direct conversion of fusion energy to electricity, can be that source. It could cut energy costs more than ten-fold. It produces no radioactive waste and would be safe enough to situate in residential neighborhoods.
Of the three approaches to achieving hydrogen-boron fusion, focus fusion, using the dense plasma focus device, has experimentally achieved conditions that are closest to those needed for net power generation. It is the only approach that can utilize the high magnetic field effect, which reduces the cooling of plasma by x-rays, helping to achieve the multi-billion-degree temperatures needed for fusion. A currently-planned three-year, $2 million experiment, if funded, can demonstrate the scientific feasibility of focus fusion.
This presentation will review the history and status of focus fusion and briefly compare it to the two competing approaches, Field Reversed Configuration (recently funded by Paul Allen) and Inertial Electrostatic Confinement, championed by Dr. Robert Bussard, a recent Google Tech Talk speaker.
Speaker: Eric Lerner Eric J. Lerner is President of Lawrenceville Plasma Physics in West Orange, NJ and Executive Director of the Focus Fusion Society. He has been an independent researcher in plasma physics since 1979, and has become internationally known for his studies linking cosmic plasma phenomena and laboratory fusion devices, especially the dense plasma focus. He has developed original theories of quasars, large scale structure, the microwave background and the origin of light elements. He is the author of The Big Bang Never Happened, published in 1991 by Random House. In 2006 he was a Visiting Scientist at the European Southern Observatory in Chile.

(6) Comments
Capacitors - a test of gallery function
Dr. Robert Bussard, 1928-2007










Comments
For a more in depth discussion, start a thread in the forums.You guys really should highlight your fundraising status a little more. Until seeing this video, between ongoing action in Chile and the licensing deal, I thought you had all the money you needed.
I checked the fundraising page…it’s over a year old. Whatever happened to the $40,000 for the switch? Did you get the switch? I look at that old page and have no idea.
Ron Paul’s political campaign raised $1.2 million in one week via online donations. They put a big thermometer on their website, and let everybody know their progress in real time. Ya gotta give people feedback!
A political campaign is a different beast…but much as I like Ron Paul, no politician can save the world like fusion could. Two million isn’t all that much, really. If Google doesn’t come through for you, come to us, and let us know exactly what you need, and keep the info coming! As close to real-time as you can get. That’s the only way you’ll build excitement and real momentum with your online donors.
You could do with laying off the quasar stuff a little. Thankfully you didn’t mention anything about the Big Bang or lack thereof.
Some nice graphics in that presentation.
OK, here’s how to fund yourself with PayPal.
Set up a holding co. which has ALL rights to future licensing, exploitation, etc.
Sell units online for $100 each, each unit representing .001% of the total net profit of the holding company on-going. (That extrapolates to 20% of net profit.)
I predict you’d have your $2M by, oh, Christmas or so. Being conservative.
Re: Brian’s Paypal suggestion, the problem is this is not legal. We can’t sell shares to the general public unless we do an initial public offering which costs anywhere from $50,000 uo to several hundred thousand.
To discuss this further, visit the Forum post on the topic.
Video doesn’t seem to be available any more.
Oop It’s back
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