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Science & Technology
Teen creates nuclear fusion in basement
2006-11-20
On the surface, Thiago Olson is like any typical teenager.

HeÂ’s on the cross country and track teams at Stoney Creek High School in Rochester Hills, Mich. HeÂ’s a good-looking, clean-cut 17-year-old with a 3.75 grade-point average, and he has his eyes fixed on the next big step: college.

But to his friends, Thiago is known as “the mad scientist.”

In the basement of his parents’ Oakland Township, Mich., home, tucked away in an area most aren’t privy to see, Thiago is exhausting his love of physics on a project that has taken him more than two years and 1,000 hours to research and build — a large, intricate machine that, on a small scale, creates nuclear fusion.

Nuclear fusion — when atoms are combined to create energy — is “kind of like the holy grail of physics,” he said. On www.fusor.net, the Stoney Creek senior is ranked as the 18th amateur in the world to create nuclear fusion. How does he do it?

Pointing to the steel chamber where all the magic happens, Thiago said on Friday that this piece of the puzzle serves as a vacuum. The air is sucked out and into a filter.

Then, deuterium gas — a form of hydrogen — is injected into the vacuum. About 40,000 volts of electricity are charged into the chamber from a piece of equipment taken from an old mammogram machine. As the machine runs, the atoms in the chamber are attracted to the center and soon — ta da — nuclear fusion.

Thiago said when that happens, a small intense ball of energy forms.

He first achieved fusion in September and has been perfecting the machine he built in his parentsÂ’ garage ever since.

This year, Thiago was a semifinalist for the Siemens FoundationÂ’s National Research Competition. He plans to enter the Science and Engineering Fair of Metropolitan Detroit, which is in March, in hopes of qualifying to be in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in New Mexico in May.

Thiago’s mom, Natalice Olson, initially was leery of the project, even though the only real danger from the fusion machine is the high voltage and small amount of X-rays emitted through a glass window in the vacuum chamber — through which Olson videotapes the fusion in action.

But, she wasn’t really surprised, because he was always coming up with lofty ideas.“Originally, he wanted to build a hyperbolic chamber,” she said, adding that she promptly said no. But, when he came asking about the nuclear fusion machine, she relented. “I think it was pretty brave that he could think that he was capable to do something so amazing,” she said.

ThiagoÂ’s dad, Mark Olson, helped with some of the construction and electrical work. To get all of the necessary parts, Thiago scoured the Internet, buying items on eBay and using his age to persuade manufacturers to give him discounts. The design of the model came from his own ideas and some suggestions from other science lovers he met online.

Someday, he hopes to work for the federal government — just like his grandfather, Clarence Olson, who designed tanks for the Department of Defense after World War II. Thiago, who is modest and humble about his accomplishment, said he knew from an early age what he would do for a living.

“I was always interested in science,” he said. “It’s always been my best subject in school.”

But, his mom had other ideas. “I thought he was going to be a cook,” Natalice Olson said, “because he liked to mix things.”
Somehow, I don't think he takes after his Mom.
Posted by:.com

#12  I'm not worried about the hyperbolic chamber. I'm worried about some of that deuterium getting out and contaminating all of Oakland Township.

Natalice? Thiago? Who are these people?

"The air is sucked out and into a filter"?? We must be careful that he doesn't put up a website and leak all this to the jihadi.
Posted by: KBK   2006-11-20 19:18  

#11  better than Brian Regan's Cup of Dirt™:

I think the worst day was the day the science project was due. Waking up that morning…that was fun, huh? Your head would pop off that pillow, “Oh, no! That’s due today.” I had nine months to work on it; I did nothing. I have a cardboard box of boxes. And you’d show up; you’re scared because you don’t have anything good and you find out all the other kids their parents made theirs for ‘em. I hated that, yanno? They’re backing them in on flatbed trucks. One kid with a volcano…he didn’t know how to zip up his own pants but he built a volcano. “How’d you swing that?”

I didnÂ’t know what to do for my project so I brought in a paper cup filled with dirt just hoping that sheÂ’d know IÂ’m an idiot and just walk right on past me just as long as I was holding something.

“What do you have there, Brian?”

“It’s a cup of dirt. Just put an ‘F’ on it there and let me go home.”

“Well, explain it.”

“Well, it’s a cup... with dirt.. in it. I call it ‘Cup of Dirt.’ You should move on now. Just go ahead and move on. Head on down the line there.”

So she went to this one kid; there’s a kid in my class who made the same solar system like 19 years in a row. A bunch of Styrofoam balls held together with coat hangars. “Hey, you’re breaking some new ground there, Copernicus.”

He’s going, “The big yellow one’s the sun. The yellow one is the sun.”

“OK, alright, what are these other planets?”

“The big yellow one is the sun.”

“Alright! Calm down!”

“Uh…(shouts) ALRIGHT!”
Posted by: Frank G   2006-11-20 15:30  

#10  "About 40,000 volts of electricity"

I'd hate to have his parents' power bill....
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2006-11-20 14:28  

#9  Damn. I thought my baking soda volcano was a big deal...
Posted by: tu3031   2006-11-20 14:11  

#8  That kid makes Eagle Scout in my book.
Posted by: wxjames   2006-11-20 14:05  

#7  And then there's David an Eagle Scout wannabe.
Posted by: Shipman   2006-11-20 13:12  

#6  Nice project. Of course fusing deuterium isn't a breakthrough, and I don't think he's fusing enough to actually produce "a small intense ball of energy." That's probably just the plasma glowing, with maybe a tiny amount of fusion inside the ball. Still, it beats any science project I tried in high school.
Posted by: James   2006-11-20 12:45  

#5  So a "hyperbolic chamber" (presumably she meant "hypobaric") was out, but nuclear fusion is just fine?

Thiago is exhausting his love of physics...

Huh, same thing happened to me when I was writing my dissertation.
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2006-11-20 12:30  

#4  Sounds rather like he built a neutrino emitting device rather than a true fusion device. 3 things are needed to verify fusion reactions as far as I remember. 1) Emission of x-rays, 2) emission of neutrinos, 3) a positive net energy gain rather than loss in the process of fusion. You can bet he got 1 or 2 of the 3 necessary requirements

Mind you I'd do it anyways for the looks on my science teachers faces when I tell em they're standing close by to a radiation/neutrino emitting source.
Posted by: Valentine   2006-11-20 10:39  

#3  But, she wasnÂ’t really surprised, because he was always coming up with lofty ideas.“Originally, he wanted to build a hyperbolic chamber,” she said, adding that she promptly said no. But, when he came asking about the nuclear fusion machine, she relented.

Hmmm. Hyperbolic chamber. Ah, yes. Hyperbolic chamber. Figgers.
Posted by: Seafarious   2006-11-20 10:28  

#2  But why hope "to work for the federal government" ? ah, yes, expensive fusion research, ready for commercial use in 20 years, as has constantly been the case for 20+ years already.
Posted by: Kalle (kafir forever)   2006-11-20 10:07  

#1  Don't worry; the Bushitler/Cheney/Halliburton/Global OilOilOil Consortium will kill it off before it reaches your home and business, so that their world domination can continue.

Besides which, of course, he hasn't developed a way to get energy out of his device. Clever kid, tho.
Posted by: Bobby   2006-11-20 06:21  

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