Comet Elenin is dead, along with doomsday predictions

The wimpy comet Elenin, which vaulted into the public spotlight as a so-called harbinger of doom, has met its own demise, and its remains won’t be back for 12,000 years, NASA scientists say.

The comet made a swing through the inner solar system in recent months, coming closest to Earth on Oct. 16, but by that time all that was left were crumbs. The fate of comet Elenin, it seems, was sealed in September during its closest approach to the sun.

“Elenin did as new comets passing close by the sun do about 2 percent of the time: It broke apart,” said Don Yeomans of NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program Office at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., in a statement Monday. “Elenin’s remnants will also act as other broken-up comets act. they will trail along in a debris cloud that will follow a well-understood path out of the inner solar system. after that, we won’t see the scraps of comet Elenin around these parts for almost 12 millennia.”

1319724017 47 Comet Elenin is dead, along with doomsday predictions Rhiannon Blaauw, Rob Suggs Two telescopes operated by astronomers at the Marshall Space Flight Center just stopped scanning the skies for Comet Elenin, which began fading and breaking apart back in August. now only empty space marks its close approach (22 million miles) to Earth. however, a meteor and the barred spiral galaxy NGC-2903 grace the top of this Oct. 14 image.

Yeomans called Elenin an “ex-comet,” one that should soon be forgotten.

Comet Elenin is still dead,” JPL officials wrote in a Twitter post.

On Sept. 10, comet Elenin flew within 45 million miles (75 million kilometers) of the sun and broke apart into pieces. by October, when the comet came within 22 million miles (35.4 million km) of Earth — its nearest pass with our planet — only a cloud of debris was visible in telescopes.

“Comets are made up of ice, rock, dust and organic compounds and can be several miles in diameter, but they are fragile and loosely held together like dust balls,” Yeomans said. “So it doesn’t take much to get a comet to disintegrate, and with comets, once they break up, there is no hope of reconciliation.”

The object became an Internet sensation when doomsayers proclaimed that comet Elenin would bring disaster to Earth. Some scenarios claimed comet Elenin would trigger catastrophic earthquakes because of its gravitational interactions with Earth. another claim speculated that Elenin wasn’t a comet at all, but actually a rogue planet called Nibiru that would also wreak havoc on Earth.

A NASA photo taken of where Elenin should have been on Oct. 14, just days before it reached its nearest point to Earth, revealed nothing but a stray meteor and a distant spiral galaxy.

“The meteor and the galaxy were purely coincidental, as it is what is not visible in the image that is important,” NASA meteor expert Bill Cooke wrote in a blog post. “Two telescopes operated by astronomers at the Marshall Space Flight Center just stopped scanning the skies for comet Elenin, which began fading and breaking apart back in August.”

Comet Elenin was discovered in December by astronomer Leonid Elenin of Lyubertsy, Russia, who used a remotely operated observatory in the United States to make the find. The comet, also known as C/2010 X1, was about 1.2 miles (2 km) wide when it was still in one piece.

Despite the hype, all of the outlandish comet Elenin doomsday claims were completely unfounded, NASA said repeatedly. but then NASA’s official responses to quell the wild speculation were taken as attempts to hide the truth about comet Elenin, the space agency said.

“I cannot begin to guess why this little comet became such a big Internet sensation,” Yeomans said. “The scientific reality is this modest-sized icy dirtball’s influence upon our planet is so incredibly minuscule that my subcompact automobile exerts a greater gravitational influence on Earth than the comet ever would.”

Still, Yeomans expects some die-hard conspiracy theorists will maintain that comet Elenin still exists.

“Perhaps a little homage to a classic Monty Python dead parrot sketch is in order,” Yeomans said. “Comet Elenin has rung down the curtain and joined the choir invisible. this is an ex-comet.”

You can follow Space.com managing editor Tariq Malik on Twitter@tariqjmalik. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter@Spacedotcomand onFacebook.

© 2011 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Science teachers are students for a day at energy conference

 Science teachers are students for a day at energy conference

Science teachers from eight school districts sharpened their teaching skills, got free Science of Energy kits and good ideas for science games at a daylong conference to bolster science and math curriculum.

The Contra Costa Regional Energy Workshop was presented by the National Energy Education Project, Inc. (NEED). California Assemblywoman Susan Bonilla opened the event, with brief remarks relating to her recent appointment as chair of California’s Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) Task Force.

While relatively high unemployment exists, employers report a shortage of qualified workers in those fields. Bonilla, a former teacher and education advocate, wants to help California educators turn out more qualified STEM graduates.

“Government can’t do it all. We need a strong coalition with partners in the community,” she said.

Science teachers from every grade level filled the Concord Salvation Army Center meeting room, listening to the NEED method for teaching students how energy transfer works, methods of energy conservation and use of a combination of all forms of energy to meet the nation’s increasing needs.

Science teacher Deborah Walker noticed she was the only teacher from Walnut Creek, and said she hopes that more teachers from that area will attend such seminars.

“We need to take advantage of every opportunity we can get to update our knowledge and make science fun for students,” she said, noting the “stunning box of goodies” provided to participants by sponsor GenOn Energy West.

Eric England, a continuation teacher in Bay Point explained, “These kids really don’t’ pay attention to traditional teaching materials. I was looking for things that I can use with my students,” he said.

“I liked hand-crank flashlights, with a transparent side that you can see the coil with wires and magnets working, and tangible demonstrations on stored electrical and physical energy,” England said.

Denise Andrade teaches fourth- and fifth-grade science at Hyde Elementary in Watsonville and came to the workshop on her day off.

“I go for the materials for my kids,” said Andrade, who teaches English language learners. “I noticed that existing materials don’t seem to make it clear that electricity is a carrier, not an energy source.

“For example, in my textbook, when they talk about kinetic energy, there is a picture of a windmill. When it talks about a generator, it shows a car generator. I can show them solar and how energy changes forms.”

Andrade has attended three PG&E workshops and will be going to the December Conoco Phillips workshop in Walnut Creek.

Teachers were put in the role of students and actually asked to do the work, puzzles and games that make up the lesson plans and experiments provided by NEED.

The daylong conference was sponsored by GenOn Energy West, which is building a new 760 megawatt natural gas-powered electrical generation station at Marsh Landing in Antioch.

The Marsh Landing plant will bring GenOn California generation stations to eight. The company supplies about 10 percent of the state’s power and expects to employ approximately 500 construction workers to complete the new plant by 2013.

“Natural gas fills in the gaps,” said GenOn California president John Chillemi. “When the wind is not blowing or there is no solar, natural gas starts and stops quickly to maintain power.”

With the recent state and federal emphasis on math and English testing in mind, Pittsburg Heights Elementary teacher Steve Langley said, “It was nice that science education, especially at the elementary level, is being supported by Susan Bonilla and GenOn. Hands-on instruction is the best way to teach science. Of course you have to learn the vocabulary and be able to read and write.”

NEED was founded in 1980 under President Carter’s administration because of concern at that time about the diminishing supply of traditional energy sources. its mission was to develop an energy-based science program and provide curriculum to teachers.

According to workshop facilitator Karen Reagor, the program is used in 65,000 classrooms all 50 states and NEED offers 600 workshops annually.

Contact Dana Guzzetti at [email protected] .—

Copyright 2011 Contra Costa NewspapersAll Rights Reservednull

How Much Power Does a Windmill Produce?

 How Much Power Does a Windmill Produce?

Do you know that many people today have managed to construct their own wind turbine energy systems at home DIY to make their own free electricity, including myself? the energy is completely free to harness and requires very little costs to maintain every few months. it is just as efficient as using fossil fuels, if not better.

1. how Much Power Does a Windmill Generate?

There are small and large unit blueprints available for different purposes. the smaller ones are generally used for domestic purposes while the larger ones can be used in bigger industrial companies and the national grid. on average, a domestic version is capable of producing up to 50W to 5,000W of power, depending on the wind conditions and the serviceability of the windmill. For commercial variants, they can produce as much as 5mW to 100mW of power as the wind farms consist of several generators combined together.

2. how Much Money will you need to Invest in a Windmill?

3. What Can you use Windmill Power Systems For?

They are able to generate free electric power 24 hours a day with wind speeds as low as 6 mph. This means that from an investment point of view, these wind turbine systems are very well worth building for more than 95% of all households. it can be used to run PCs, lights and most other home appliances. it also stores electricity in a battery system to provide for backup when there is a power outage or insufficient wind speeds.

UT comes in eighth in global solar energy house design challenge

 UT comes in eighth in global solar energy house design challenge

The University of Tennessee placed eighth overall in the Solar Decathlon sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy that challenged 19 teams worldwide to build and use an efficient, attractive and affordable house powered exclusively by solar energy.

The University of Maryland took home the title in results announced Saturday afternoon.

Teams set up the prototypes of their houses on the National Mall in Washington D.C. and then competed in 10 contests judging qualities like architecture and comfort.

UT’s loft-like house, titled “Living Light,” earned a perfect score in the energy balance competition for equating energy production with energy consumption to produce as much energy as the house needs.

Tennessee also received high marks in the hot-water competition that required the team demonstrate that the house’s water heating system can supply all the hot water required for necessary daily tasks.

Living Light took third place Thursday in the engineering contest, what Solar Decathlon Director Richard King called the heart of the competition.

“The impressive houses designed by this year’s collegiate teams all have practical applications that can help every American save money. This year’s houses are proving to be highly reliable, which is a testament to their engineering excellence,” King said.

Living Light, estimated at a value of more than $400,000, faltered in the affordability contest.

“By initiating the affordability contest this year, we wanted to emphasize that many of the energy-efficient features in these amazing houses are within reach of many Americans,” King said.

Today marks the last day the houses are open to the public. They can be toured on the National Mall from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Wind turbines harness MRI tech

 Wind turbines harness MRI tech

Why is it, that the only political resistance to wind energy is ‘the view’? Most homeowners don’t care one whit about bats and birds. The folks in the mountains scream ‘Not in my backyard! Put them offshore!’ The folks at the beach scream ‘Not in my backyard! Put them in the mountains!’

I bet if you just turn off their electricity for a couple days they would change their tune.

Further, the wind doesn’t just ‘die instantaneously’. It doesn’t work like that. Modern forecasting has made wind fairly predictable often days in advance. Plus the majority of wind energy is during the day, which is when the peak electricity usage happens.

Most fossil fuel plants are coal fired. It is impossible to ‘kick them in instantly’. Gas turbine generators will turn on with the flick of a switch, and are already currently used in conjunction with coal and nuclear fired generators to handle demand peaks. (like when everybody turns on their AC) Wind energy is more of a replacement for coal fired generators than for diesel.

Guess what? There are no magical solutions to our energy problem. you can put up wind turbines on top of a mountain, or you can chop the mountain in half to get the coal. Which harms ‘the view’ more? Wind turbines are one arrow in the quiver to try and replace the human race’s use of one cubic mile of oil every year.

Short sighted selfish humans are by far the biggest obstacle to renewable energy.

Architectural Salvage Project to Add Character and Excitement to Your Home

 Architectural Salvage Project to Add Character and Excitement to Your Home

Hello to all you archeologists (of the salvage variety) here is a great idea to bring the outside into the inside of your home before the weather hits and you are confined to quarters

The idea is a outdoor inspired mirror made at very low cost from a old architectural window and a pair of shutters in complimentary size and scale to the window. Generally the window can have as many panes as inspire you or be one solid piece of plate glass. a really interesting window and our design idea is created from diamond pattern windows. put your creativity hats on here goes the idea:

Step 1. find a very inspiring window that has the patina or old character that inspires you. your local salvage store, demolition yard, antique or thrift store, flea market or a really inspiring garage or estate sale should provide a treasure for you to recreate

Step 2. Add a pair of shutters from the same source of supply that are complimentary in scale if you want a cottage front style or leave it window only if your inspiration dictates.

Step 3. cut the window caulking away from the glass with a razor blade knife and remove the glass. Take the glass to your closest mirror store and have them cut inexpensive mirror pieces in the same size as the glass. (many times they have mis-cuts that they will offer to you at very low prices). Home Depot will also cut mirror for you at low prices. if you are handy get a piece of plate glass mirror and a glass cutter and do it yourself.

Step 4. place the new mirrored panels into the window frame and re caulk the mirror around the edge of the window frame. PRESTO / CHANGO you have a wonderful architectural design element for your home. you will be surprised how dramatic this element is creating a feeling of depth to your room.

Step 5. Add picture hangers to the back to mount this to the wall or screw in your new mirror to the wall.

Here are some other variations to inspire you:

Variation #1- Add a pair of shutters. Mount the shutters on either side or your window mirror. this will create a cottage wall type of effect to your mirror creation.

Variation #2- Add a flower box. a really cool idea to either find or build a proportionally sized flower box below your mirrored window. you can purchase one inexpensively from your local home improvement store or build one from some new wood (with a paint job of your choice). 1×6 redwood or cedar fence boards (under $2 per 6′ board) work great plus their rough surfaces are better with the old patina of your window mirror. Mount your window box under the window mirror (with or without) the shutters and add silk flowers or green plants and you will have a bit of the outside to cheer your soul (for those of you who deal with inclement winters).

I hope you enjoy this inexpensive architectural adventure to add rustic character to your home. I will be sending you more architectural information and ideas in the future stop by any time and get architecturally inspired and educated. There is great satisfaction and fun in doing your own thing and finding new and wonderful uses for salvaged items. you also are doing a ecologically solid thing by rescuing salvaged materials from the landfill

If you live in Southern California, please stop by and visit our two acre primitive and architectural store, Silverado Warehouse in Rainbow, California (4 mi. so. of Temecula). We will work with you personally to find new uses for great old things Visit us online at http://www.silveradowarehouse.com.

Panels a shining addition to school » Local News » SalemNews.com, Salem, MA

 Panels a shining addition to school »
Local News »
SalemNews.com, Salem, MA

BEVERLY — With the solar panels that were built in 1981 on the hill next to the high school, Beverly has one of the oldest examples of renewable energy in the country.

Now it also has one of the newest. Officials gathered on the roof of the new four-story high school last week to celebrate the completion of the solar array there.

Combined with the panels on the hill, the new, 83-kilowatt rooftop array will provide 15 percent of the new building’s electrical demands, Mayor bill Scanlon said.

The roof panels were installed as part of the $81 million high school project and helped contribute to an extra 2 percent, or $1.6 million, in state reimbursement for attaining “green school” status.

Massachusetts clean Energy Center Director Andy Brydges said Beverly has “set the standard” for other school districts with its new energy-efficient building, which opened last year. The agency contributed nearly $500,000 in grants to build the rooftop array and renovate the Greenergy Park hillside panels next door.

“Your school is absolutely beautiful,” Brydges said at the ceremony. “It’s a tribute to the foresight and the commitment of the town.” Scanlon said there are plans to upgrade the Greenergy array from 100 kilowatts to 400 kilowatts. Scanlon said the city will seek a private company that can take advantage of tax breaks available to upgrade the panels, in exchange for the city agreeing to buy the power it generates.

Staff writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2675 or by email at pleighton@salemnews.com.

ReportsnReports – China Wind Turbine Casting Industry (2011), U.S. Convenience Store Foodservice Trends & Discount Offers on Euromonitor Research Reports

 ReportsnReports   China Wind Turbine Casting Industry (2011), U.S. Convenience Store Foodservice Trends & Discount Offers on Euromonitor Research ReportsPress Release Source: ReportsnReports on Monday September 12, 2011, 4:09 am EDT

DALLAS, September 12, 2011 /PRNewswire/ –

ReportsnReports announces it will carry market research intelligence on China Wind Turbine Casting Industry (2011) and U.S. Convenience Store Foodservice Trends as well as offer Discounts on Euromonitor Research Reports in its store

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This report covers Wind Turbine Casting Industry Overview, Manufacturing Technology and Process, Production Supply Sales Demand Market Status and Forecast, Key Manufacturers, China Wind Turbine Casting Upstream suppliers of raw materials and equipment analysis, Downstream Co-operation Wind Turbine Manufacturers and more with a large number of Tables and Figures to support the analysis. It covers info & statistics on 17 Wind Turbine Casting Manufacturers product (750KW 850KW 1.0MW 1.25MW 1.5MW 1.65MW 2.0MW 2.5MW 3.0MW 5.0MW etc.) and other detailed information. the report also covers 20000 tons/year Wind Turbine Casting project feasibility analysis and related research conclusions.

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This research estimates that convenience store foodservice sales grew 5.6% in 2010, and forecasts sales to rise by 5.8% in 2011 and 5.3% in 2012, on the heels of aggressive foodservice platform build outs and increased convenience store foodservice patronage. in the process, foodservice is transforming the convenience store user experience, forcing players to improve their platforms or get left behind.

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Wind Generators For Home Use – How to Build One on Your Own?

 Wind Generators For Home Use   How to Build One on Your Own?

Wind generators for home use are fast becoming the choice of homeowners looking to save on energy bills. The savings apart, they are also great for the environment too. with the right supplies and tools, you too can build your own wind generator these days. You can have a machine that will put an end to all your worries about the energy bills.

Contrary to popular perception wind generators for home use are not that difficult to build. some of the things that you need for building one in your home include bolts, nuts and batteries, things that you can always find in a hardware store near you. with these easily available things, you can now build your own wind generator, with a little bit of effort on your part. Moreover, you need not spend a small fortune to build and install a windmill in your home.

You will need to make sure that you check the appropriate laws that govern installation of windmills in your particular area. You will need a proper permit to install one in your home. You can start off the entire process by first of all finding a proper location in your home. when it comes to the design of wind generators, there are two types that are available, horizontal axis and vertical axis, with the former being the more widely in domestic generators.

DC motors are usually used when building wind generators for home use. The size of the motor will also dictate the size of the blades of the windmill. The simple thumb rule being, the bigger the motor, the bigger would be the size of the blades. while the blades are usually made of PVC, for the body of the machine, stainless steel is preferred.

Build safer nuclear plants? We have the power

in the aftermath of the Fukushima disaster in March, the appetite for new nuclear power plants slipped to post-Chernobyl lows. Regulators from Italy to Switzerland to Texas moved to stop pending nuclear-power projects, and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) began to re-evaluate the safety of all domestic plants. Yet nuclear power still provides 20 percent of America’s total electric power and 70 percent of its emissions-free energy, in large part because no alternative energy source can match its efficiency.

One nuclear plant with a footprint of one square mile provides the energy equivalent of 20 square miles of solar panels, 1,200 windmills or the entire Hoover Dam. If the country wants to significantly reduce its dependence on carbon-based energy, it will need to build more nuclear power plants. The question is how to do so safely.

In the 30 years since regulators last approved the construction of a new nuclear plant in the U.S., engineers have improved reactor safety considerably. (You can see some of the older, not-so-safe ones in this sweet gallery.) The newest designs, called Generation III+, are just beginning to come online. (Generation I plants were early prototypes; Generation IIs were built from the 1960s to the 1990s and include the facility at Fukushima; and Generation IIIs began operating in the late 1990s, though primarily in Japan, France and Russia.)

1310253010 70 Build safer nuclear plants? We have the power Courtesy of PopSci Half the world’s 440 nuclear reactors are based on Westinghouse designs. Fifty years of operational safety features inform the passive safety features of the new 1,150-megawatt AP1000, the first Generation III+ rector to get final design certification from the NRC.

Unlike their predecessors, most Generation III+ reactors have layers of passive safety elements designed to stave off a meltdown, even in the event of power loss. Construction of the first Generation III+ reactors is well under way in Europe. China is also in the midst of building at least 30 new plants. in the U.S., the Southern Co. recently broke ground on the nation’s first Generation III+ reactors at the Vogtle nuclear plant near Augusta, Ga. The first of two reactors is due to come online in 2016.

See PopSci’s complete infographic here

Like many of the 20 or so pending Generation III+ facilities in the U.S., the Vogtle plant will house Westinghouse AP1000 reactors. A light-water reactor, the AP1000 prompts uranium-235 into a chain reaction that throws off high-energy neutrons. The particles heat water into steam, which then turns a turbine that generates electricity.

The greatest danger in a nuclear plant is a meltdown, in which solid reactor fuel overheats, melts and ruptures its containment shell, releasing radioactive material. (Want more information? Check out our explainer on how nuclear reactors work — and how they fail.) Like most reactors, the AP1000 is cooled with electrically powered water pumps and fans, but it also has a passive safety system, which employs natural forces such as gravity, condensation and evaporation to cool a reactor during a power outage.

The U.S. has 104 nuclear reactors operating at 65 sites in 31 states, all of them approved before 1980. A central feature of this system is an 800,000-gallon water tank positioned directly above the containment shell. The reservoir’s valves rely on electrical power to remain closed. when power is lost, the valves open and the water flows down toward the containment shell. Vents passively draw air from outside and direct it over the structure, furthering the evaporative cooling.

Depending on the type of emergency, an additional reservoir within the containment shell can be manually released to flood the reactor. As water boils off, it rises and condenses at the top of the containment shell and streams back down to cool the reactor once more. unlike today’s plants, most of which have enough backup power onsite to last just four to eight hours after grid power is lost, the AP1000 can safely operate for at least three days without power or human intervention.

Even with their significant safety improvements, Generation III+ plants can, theoretically, melt down. Some people within the nuclear industry are calling for the implementation of still newer reactor designs, collectively called Generation IV. The thorium-powered molten-salt reactor (MSR) is one such design. in an MSR, liquid thorium would replace the solid uranium fuel used in today’s plants, a change that would make meltdowns all but impossible.

MSRs were developed at Tennessee’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the early 1960s and ran for a total of 22,000 hours between 1965 and 1969. “These weren’t theoretical reactors or thought experiments,” says engineer John Kutsch, who heads the nonprofit Thorium Energy Alliance. “(Engineers) really built them, and they really ran.” Of the handful of Generation IV reactor designs circulating today, only the MSR has been proven outside computer models. “It was not a full system, but it showed you could successfully design and operate a molten-salt reactor,” says Oak Ridge physicist Jess Gehin, a senior program manager in the lab’s Nuclear Technology Programs office.

1310253010 93 Build safer nuclear plants? We have the power Courtesy of PopSci in a thorium-powered molten-salt reactor (MSR), liquid thorium would replace the solid uranium fuel used in today’s plants, a change that would make meltdowns all but impossible. MSRs were developed at Tennessee’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the early 1960s.

One pound of thorium produces as much power as 300 pounds of uranium — or 3.5 million pounds of coal.The MSR design has two primary safety advantages. its liquid fuel remains at much lower pressures than the solid fuel in light-water plants. This greatly decreases the likelihood of an accident, such as the hydrogen explosions that occurred at Fukushima. further, in the event of a power outage, a frozen salt plug within the reactor melts and the liquid fuel passively drains into tanks where it solidifes, stopping the fission reaction. “The molten-salt reactor is walk-away safe,” Kutsch says. “If you just abandoned it, it had no power, and the end of the world came — a comet hit Earth — it would cool down and solidify by itself.”

See PopSci’s complete infographic here

Although an MSR could also run on uranium or plutonium, using the less-radioactive element thorium, with a little plutonium or uranium as a catalyst, has both economic and safety advantages. Thorium is four times as abundant as uranium and is easier to mine, in part because of its lower radioactivity. The domestic supply could serve U.S. electricity needs for centuries. Thorium is also exponentially more efficient than uranium. “In a traditional reactor, you’re burning up only a half a percent to maybe 3 percent of the uranium,” Kutsch says. “In a molten-salt reactor, you’re burning 99 percent of the thorium.” The result: one pound of thorium yields as much power as 300 pounds of uranium — or 3.5 million pounds of coal.

Because of this efficiency, a thorium MSR would produce far less waste than today’s plants. Uranium-based waste will remain hazardous for tens of thousands of years. With thorium, it’s more like a few hundred. As well, raw thorium is not fissile in and of itself, so it is not easily weaponized. “It can’t be used as a bomb,” Kutsch says. “You could have 1,000 pounds in your basement, and nothing would happen.”

One nuclear plant provides the energy equivalent of 1,200 windmills or 20 square miles of solar panels.Without the need for large cooling towers, MSRs can be much smaller than typical light-water plants, both physically and in power capacity. Today’s average nuclear power plant generates about 1,000 megawatts. A thorium-fueled MSR might generate as little as 50 megawatts. Smaller, more numerous plants could save on transmission loss (which can be up to 30 percent on the present grid). The U.S. Army is interested in using MSRs to power individual bases, Kutsch says, and Google, which relies on steady power to keep its servers running, held a conference on thorium reactors last year. “The company would love to have a 70- or 80-megawatt reactor sitting next door to a data center,” Kutsch says.

Even with military and corporate support, the transition to a new type of nuclear power generation is likely to be slow, at least in the U.S. Light-water reactors are already established, and no regulations exist to govern other reactor designs. Outside the U.S., the transition could come more quickly. in January the Chinese government launched a thorium reactor program. “The Chinese Academy of Sciences has approved development of an MSR with relatively near-term deployment — maybe 10 years,” says Gehin, who thinks the Chinese decision may increase work on the technology worldwide. Even after Fukushima, “there’s still interest in advanced nuclear,” he says. “I don’t see that changing.”

More on nuclear power, past, present and future, from popular Science: