Do you honestly believe that the human race wouldn't have found solutions to the current problems in 500+ years? As someone said earlier, technological advancement increases exponentially. This century technology is set to increase 1000 times faster than the past 300 years put together. To put that into perspective, that is like going from horse drawn carriages to landing on the moon within 1 week of each other. Do you really think fusion technology, reactor designs and other things will still ahve the same problems they do today, in 100 years?
Due to the current state of terraforming on Mars, I doubt that we're farther than a hundred years in the future. Besides, stop using the
Sufficiently advanced technology argument. And, exponential systems don't last. They fall apart rapidly. After all
extrapolating is fun and stuff, but in the end it's guessing. And well, it's all fun and games, but you can't ignore fundamental problems.
The strength of a Fusion reactor is massively important. It is one of the main reasons holding fusion technology back. They haven't found a strong enough material that can withstand the reaction. Hence, nano-materials (which could be designed to withstand neutrons and other bombardments, either through improving the nano-tech itself, or 'weaving in' some sort of resistance metal or material). The beauty of nano-tech is that, theoretically, they can do whatever you want them to do.
The Strength of a fusion reactor is not important. After all, the plasma inside a reactor never actually touches the sides of reactor. Should it happen, then it will rapidly cool down and the fusion reaction will immediately stop, before any damage happens. The only thing a fusion reactors core lining needs is to whistand vacuum, and the neutron flow. These latter are subatomic particles, and hence nanomaterials* won't help you. Unlike what Hollywood would want you to believe, not every engineering problem can be solved by adding nano in front of it.
*
After all, nano engineering is on the scale of individual atoms, and their strength lies in the grids in which they are arranged. High speed neutrons attack individual atoms, and hence can't easily be stopped. Self repairing nanomaterials might help, but they won't be able to stop the neutrons . After all neutrons, being the subatomic particles they are, can just fly through the gaps in the structure. (And no, you can't fill those up)Fusion cannot be miniaturized at the moment, but in 500 years? New reactor designs, advances in materials and scientific understanding etc will have advanced sufficiently. I am not 'calling magic' on it, i am just leaving space for whatever will come about. Hell, if those guys at CERN can find the 'God Particle', maybe after the appropriate research we could play with the structure of things itself and make a materiel that solves all out problems with Fusion?
The
"god" particle is massively overhyped. In fact, it would more interesting if they hadn't found it. And as I said, it's a fundamental engineering problem. Can't solve it without inventing cold fusion of some sort. Also, neutrons are annoying particles. Can only be stopped by pure mass.
For the same matter, who says we will still be using fusion in 500 years. 3 against one, the technology is massively outdated.
As for funding. ONLY 750 million Euros? for something thousands of times more advanced and complex than glorified windmills? That is nowhere near enough. If i had the money I'd pump in a minimum of £6-10 billion. 750 million euros.....pathetic amount of funding.
Only 750 million euros in the EU alone,
excluding the 15 billion ITER program. ((Costs rose a bit to much))
Finally, early nano-materials we have today are being tested in as many different environments (including radioactive environments) and they are promising signs that, if properly done, they dont suffer from the same deficiencies as traditional reactor materials.
There are many different types of radiation. Still, while they might find a problem for metal deficits, they won't be able to miniaturize the particle shields much. You'd need a pure neutronium shield to get compact, one hundred procent capture rate.
EDIT: Just realised, once GWG starts playing, he better not get captured. the Kai would be interested in his Psi abilities, which could lead to some interesting capture sequences.
First human capture in the first game, which is canon for this one, was a natural psychic.