Originally posted by: KenGr
Originally posted by: SinfulWeeper
I dunno know who came up with the idea of how to build the bomb. What I do know is this, when all the atoms split. The entire chain reaction is done in less than 20 billionths (or was is trillionths?) of a second. Done... nada... no more...
The explosion you see is the 'waste' of that fraction of a second.
The person who figures out to keep that waste contained and stored will be shot and killed by the oil companies because of the threat it poses to them. Think of that one for a while.
Fission is fission, whether it's a reactor or a bomb. The difference in geometry just means that the reactor, in the worst case, can slightly supercritical (this is how power is increased - with a small supercritical transient) while the bomb can go massively supercritical. If the fissile material is the same, the reaction is the same.
Actually, the concept of using a "bomb" for power production was fairly well developed some years ago. Essentially you would develop a large underground compartment and set off, at regular intervals, small bomb blasts. This would create high pressure and temperature which could be tapped at a steady rate for power production. There's no reason it can't work but it holds no real economic advantage over power reactors. Also, it's completely unacceptable from a proliferation viewpoint, so don't expect to see this one proposed.