Yanlin's link(pic?) is broken, so I'm not sure how to react, but I suspect that something along the lines of "Yes, I'm a pedantic nerd" would be in order.
Continuing:
some guy said they'd use tritium and deuterium to make he4... thatd make he5 iirc
also, fission really doesnt make the uranium split up into individual neutrons and protons. the uranium splits into two radioactive elements with slightly less total mass than the uranium, which is where the energy comes from.
(...)
also, what is this about neutrinos being dangerous? they're really not.
LegoLord already corrected the he5 "question", so:
Fission does result in free neutrons(uranium decay results in 2.5 neutrons on average) as well as two, often radioactive, elements and a gamma ray photon. Each of those carries away some energy
Neutrinos aren't dangerous, true. However, we've been talking about neutrons, which can be quite deadly.
How would one go about building a window that would let alpha radiation through? I sense a contradiction there...
Sure it's a contradiction. It was meant to show that even though it's incorrect to say that alpha radiation isn't dangerous, containing it in fusion reactor is not a problem at all.
(there are still those neutrons though, which are slightly more annoying)
Personally, I'm much more in favor of improving our fission tech. We can reuse our nuclear waste as nuclear fuel for about 10,000x as long as we've been doing it already. Yes we're short on uranium, but the waste can be just as good if we just developed the tech a little lot more. And then you don't have the problem of dumping it, or of it falling into the wrong hands, because it's still very valuable as fuel!
Hey, Sowelu, I think we might've already discussed this in some other thread, but where do you get those fugures from? You can't reuse all of the nuclear waste, you know. All you can do is remove those nuclear poisons that accumulated over time.