Skipjack wrote: ↑Tue Jan 21, 2025 4:23 pm
Aside from the obvious statement that they are looking for new, better materials for their magnets, it also re- affirms that Polaris is operational. I suppose that this is meant to address the claims to the contrary made by some people (citing permits).
I felt I should respond to this. Maybe this is a better venue because there can be so much noise on Reddit. There is something to be said for a three-year-old thread that is still going strong.
TL;DR: While Helion can do a lot of non-fusion work with Polaris using Hydrogen plasma, including FRC formation, merging, and compression, I don't believe they can do fusion, including net energy or net electricity, until they get an operating license from the state and I believe that is at least a few months away.
All of my information is public, either from the City of Everett Permit Services or the Washington State Department of Health. Relevant documents can be found here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/ ... sp=sharing (Edit: Link should be public now.)
Only a handful of building permits are currently outstanding for Ursa. A final electrical inspection (E2407-059) is scheduled for Tuesday (1/28) afternoon. Two permits for high pile racks for the capacitors (B2312-034) and rectifiers (B2405-074) were given extensions in early December, but there is no reason to expect they won't get their final inspections soon.
The other outstanding permit (B2304-083) is for the shield walls and roof. Detailed plans can be found in the link above, but in addition to the cast-in-place walls which were poured a year ago, the remaining two corners will be filled with 76 modular pre-cast concrete blocks, 5' wide by 5' high and 2.5' thick, with a large steel door in each corner. Then 206 2.5' thick blocks of borated polyethylene (BPE) will be mounted on the entire inside surface of the walls. Finally, 36 roof segments will be placed with 11" high steel beams supporting 1' thick concrete panels and 1.5' thick BPE blocks.
After the roof is in place, they still need to install tritium exhaust for the generator hall and a fire suppression system inside since the roof will block the existing sprinklers. Neither of these permits has been applied for, so this is the main reason I don't expect the operating license for at least a few more months. The license itself should not be a major delay because it only requires an amendment to the existing license to remove the "Notice of Construction" which can be done in 60 days or less:
https://app.leg.wa.gov/wAC/default.aspx ... 46-247-060
There was a flurry of inspections by the city in December culminating in a 6-month temporary certificate of occupancy for Ursa on December 24 (B2104-001) which I think was so they could receive an operating license for the tritium lab which they will need to fully commission before doing fusion in Polaris.