Frankly, discovering the secret to
nuclear fusion seemed more likely.
Nuclear fusion seems like the perfect solution, with virtually limitless supplies of fuel, no greenhouse gases, and little radioactive waste.
Not exact matches
For less massive stars like the Sun the process that brings them into existence is quite well understood — as clouds of gas are pulled together under gravity, density and temperature increase, and
nuclear fusion begins)-- but for the most massive stars buried in regions like RCW 106 this explanation does not
seem to be fully adequate.
And for those of us for whom canning
seems both infinitely mysterious and akin to figuring out
nuclear fusion, freezing is so much, well, easier.
The lower ghg solutions,
nuclear energy now and orbiting solar power stations or
fusion or some unknown source in the long term future all have to pass the environmentalist test which, at the present,
seems to be «no» to every realistic solution.
Nuclear fusion might be possible, who knows, but it
seem to be harder than we thought, probably because of size and pressure problems.
It
seems likely to me that, within 100 years,
Nuclear fusion plants will be a viable source of baseload power.