Skip to main content

The Boy who played with fusion ~ Taylor Wilson

 


Taylor is a prodigy who lately took great interest in nuclear energy during his early days of childhood. He had built his own nuclear reactor and performed a nuclear fusion using a fuser at the age of 14.

Taylor Wilson was born in 1994 in Texarkana, Arkansas to Kenneth and Tiffany Wilson. His father is the owner of a Coca-Cola bottling plant, and his mother was a Yoga instructor. Wilson was initially interested in rocketry and space science, before entering the field of nuclear science at age 10.

The University of Nevada-Reno offered a home for his early experiments when Wilson’s worried parents realized he had every intention of building his reactor in the garage.

In June 2012, Wilson was awarded a Thiel Fellowship. He is also a Tedx speaker and an entrepreneur of the future, who takes great interest in finding alternative sustainable sources of energy.

In March 2012, Wilson spoke at a TED conference regarding the building of his fusion reactor.

In February 2013 at Ted, Wilson presented his ideas on the benefits of building small underground nuclear fission reactors. He designed a variation of a compact molten salt reactor that he says would supply about 50 MW and would need refueling only once every 30 years.

Author Tom Clynes, inspired by Taylor, wrote a book “The Boy Who Played With Fusion”.

When Taylor was 11, he found out that his grandmother was dying of cancer. He and his grandmother were extremely close. He had been experimenting with radioactive materials for over a year. He asked his grandmother if he could have some of her urine to test while she was going through nuclear medicine procedures.

He dissected bits of her tumors and lungs, which she had coughed up. Then, he started thinking about how people around the world get these medical isotopes. He learned that they’re made in these multi-million dollar cyclotron and are extremely expensive.

The areas where Taylor made a lot of innovation are counterterrorism and nuclear medicine. His other big development is a system to produce medical isotopes that are injected into patients and used to diagnose and treat cancer. It’s a design that costs less than $100,000 and wheels right into a hospital room—replacing multimillion-dollar, warehouse-size facilities.

Taylor firmly believes Nuclear energy is the future and he has put his heart into it. He says he has tons of ideas in his mind some of which he has already showcased by revolutionizing the way energy can be used.

Reference
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor_Wilson
https://www.ted.com/speakers/taylor_wilson https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2015/07/150726-nuclear-reactor-fusion-science-kid-ngbooktalk/
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2012/11/taylor-wilson/309132/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Remote Developer Job Sites

Remote Developer Job Sites 1.  https://angel.co/ 2.  https://turing.com/ 3.  https://www.employremotely.com/ 4.  https://www.upwork.com/ 5.  https://www.freelancer.com/ 6.  https://www.pesto.tech/ 7.  https://www.guru.com/ 8.  https://www.fiverr.com/ 9.  https://remotive.io/ 10. Search Remote Jobs on LinkedIn or other such platforms. 11. Sell Code on  https://codecanyon.net/ Lastly, a viable option could be, you can open your own website, display your work and get your own set of clients.

The Salesforce MasterClass

  Salesforce Master Class 1.0 Overview Orgs Developer Console Setup Objects Object Relationship Object Manager Page Layout Multitenant Architecture Governor Limits Metadata Standard Objects Custom Objects Fields Formula Fields Roll Up Summary Fields Master Detail Relationship LookUp Relationship Validation Rules Web to Lead Chatter Schema Builder Workflow Rules Process Builder Workflow vs Process Builder Salesforce Master Class 2.0 Apex Triggers Visual Flow Apex Visualforce Static Resources SOQL SOSL SOQL vs SOSL Workbench DML Lightening Components/Aura Lightening Web Components Lwc vs Aura Lightening Design System Apex Test Class Approval Process Reports  Dashboards Data Loader, Import wizard Salesforce Data Security Apex CallOuts Integration Public Groups, Sharing Rules Sandbox and Production Change Set Deployment Salesforce Master Class 1.0 Overview - Salesforce Classic Salesforce Classic is the earlier version of the UI which was provided within the Salesforce Application ...

Is React Native Garbage ?

Well we shall look into two different scenarios inorder to understand this fully. Scenario 1. Company like Google or Apple who wants to release an app and wants real crazy fast app load, wants better control over hardware and does not much care about the cost of hiring teams of native developers for different platforms. This is the case when one should opt for Native code bases like Java or Swift.  Now lets look at our next Scenario. Scenario 2. A startup wants to grow crazy fast. It has cost constraint but wants to reach the consumer base of both web, ios and android. In such a scenario, the startup settles down with a framework like React Native and does not bother if the app loads up a little slow, and serves its purpose of getting to the larger audience faster with a bunch of Javascript Developers. So, nothing is garbage. Its just two different scenarios and different priorities based on Business demand.