penny wrote:We are discussing plans of powering thousands of them in real time with beamed power, for all intents and purposes indefinitely (or until a protracted engagement is over). Split, beamed power.
tlb wrote:No, we were NOT. I was saying that if we want more than six shots during an engagement, then the IEWP's would need an internal reactor for power.
The beamed power is for the long periods when there is not active combat, just to keep the platforms ready in case an enemy appears. Either for the graser, if no other internal power source or to start the reactor.
Ok, let’s slow this down. We were initially discussing two things. Explaining why Honor says that capacitors need to be shut down to recharge them which led to a discussion about whether beamed power can or should be able to accomplish the task.
Then you suggested indefinite shots throughout a protracted engagement. Indefinite shots would require a reactor aboard each platform. Ten thousand reactors and ten thousand platforms. That is an immense undertaking. Doable in the HV. Certainly with Manticore’s building capacity pre Oyster Bay. At any rate, you've got to crawl before you can walk. So, I suspect Shannon drew up a project that enables a quick and practical use of the SL grasers that can be utilized quickly and within reason. The use of plasma capacitors instead of reactors would make the project much less complicated, cheaper and would get the project completed quickly. I also imagine a project of that size and permanence would require too much maintenance if reactors are in use for an indefinite length of time. Reactors need bodies to monitor readings. I suppose computers can handle the task in many instances but therein lies your blossoming project again.
But minus the reactors the option becomes beamed power. Beamed power is simply a high tech form of transferring power without the extension cord. There is a high stakes game of cord cutting in the HV. (Perhaps that is why there are no cable companies in existence).
But beamed power also has limitations of distance and maximum power delivery. Same variables as today’s limitations. Plus, the platforms have to be able to receive
this power without it having to be stepped up or down. Which would add even more complexity and infrastructure helping to blossom the project way beyond the feasible and practical.
In fact, she’s already worked out the quickest way to run up a remote platform tied into the central fire control system of a standard terminus fort.”
A remote platform has to be run up and tied into the central fire control system of a single fort. Where Shannon has already conceived of the easiest method to accomplish the task, it has to be duplicated possibly ten thousand times depending on the ability of the platform. Shannon is talking about platforms the size of the 400,000 ton Mycroft. Of course, she says two freighters can carry each and each assembled in two days.
Anyway, barring the unfeasibility of topping the plethora of platforms off with beamed power, there is still going to be a required amount of time to complete the task of charging capacitors that do have an inherent charge time.
At any rate, I am suggesting that beamed power is impractical to recharge that many platforms once they are depleted, but it should be feasible simply to keep them topped off.
Theemile has suggested that plasma = steam power. That’s a nice analogy and I also thought about the power derived from heating water. But of course, the use of plasma is much more efficient than that.
The following is going to be to tlb’s dismay.
Again, it is obvious to me that the HV has solved the Grand Unified Theory (GUT). It would explain a lot of the abilities of HV tech without the need for pixie dust. Tlb calls it my silly invention or something. It isn’t. It is simply physics. It is the holy grail that Einstein sought for a large part of his life.
If the GUT has been solved, then the plasma itself is quickly converted into energy; or rather, is quickly available for energy. Plasma is already the base of our proposed fusion reactors. France has sustained a fusion reaction for 22 minutes.
However, plasma is generated from fuel (gases) itself. I am guessing that the materials to make the plasma is itself replaced after the platforms shoot themselves dry. The generation of plasma aboard ship is a piece of cake with the use of gravity, etc. Aboard a platform the plasma has to be included when the platform launches.
From Wiki: Fusion processes require fuel, in a state of plasma, and a confined environment with sufficient temperature, pressure, and confinement time. The combination of these parameters that results in a power-producing system is known as the Lawson criterion. In stellar cores the most common fuel is the lightest isotope of hydrogen (protium), and gravity provides the conditions needed for fusion energy production. Proposed fusion reactors would use the heavy hydrogen isotopes of deuterium and tritium for DT fusion, for which the Lawson criterion is known to be easiest to achieve. This produces a helium nucleus and an energetic neutron.[5] Most designs aim to heat their fuel to around 100 million kelvins, which presents a major challenge in producing a successful design. Fusion fuel is 10 million times more energy dense than coal,[6] but tritium is extremely rare on Earth, having a half life of only ~12.3 years. Consequently, during the operation of envisioned fusion reactors, breeding blankets are subjected to neutron fluxes to generate tritium to complete the fuel cycle.[7]
In closing, putting a reactor onboard the platforms might be defeating the purpose and making the project too complicated and unwieldly. Onboard a warship the support infrastructure for the plasma is not a big deal. To achieve onboard the platforms with plasma capacitors (or plasma capacitors and reactors) what is achieved aboard ship might be a bit too ambitious. A wonderful idea if it can be made practical.
And that doesn’t even consider whether the type of plasma capacitors used is the same.
.
.
.
The artist formerly known as cthia.
Now I can talk in the third person.