But first, some news of the day.
- President Donald Trump seems to be losing control on all fronts.
- The New York Knicks beat the San Antonio Spurs in Game 1 of the NBA finals, 105-95.
- Haven't said much about Major League Baseball, which is about 38% into the season, with almost four months left. From Google AI, the top pitchers are:
- Top hitters: Yordan Alvarez of Houston and Ben Rice of the Yankees. Fewer home runs this year, with Kyle Schwarber of Philadelphia in the lead with 23.
- Top teams:
- My two head-to-head fantasy baseball teams are undefeated and leading their league of 10. My two Roto teams are at #3 and #4, so not doing well.
If you keep track of these things, I changed my posting of two days ago from MY LIFE: Part 2, to Part 1b. This is because Part 2, today, reports on my second 27-year period, and Part 3 will complete this series. So on to my second 27-year period, which began when I started my career at the University of Hawaii, Manoa Campus in 1972.
- I arrived as an assistant professor, and was assigned to teach Fortran IV programming.
- Never took the course, but I had come from LSU, where Paul Murrill and Cecil Smith were members of the chemical engineering faculty, and were already famous for their 1968 textbook on this subject.
- As I walked to the auditorium to meet with my 100 or so (class range from freshmen to graduate students) for my first attempt at teaching, I was still trying to decide whether to tell them I did not know the subject, or wing it as an "expert."
- Chose to play professor, and when a question came up for which I did not know the answer, indicated in response that I did not want to confuse the class with that detail and to wait until I get to the subject.
- At the end of the course, streams of students came to my office to tell me what a great course this was.
- This never happened again, for all the other courses I taught were on topics where I was an expert.
- There is something important about this experience to make better teachers, but I never was able to fine tune my lectures because the First Energy Crisis came in my second year of teaching, and I turned my focus into the research of renewable energy, was sent to work in the U.S. Senate for three years, and became an administrator.
- In the mid-70s, I served as one of the reservoir engineers for the Hawaii Geothermal Project, and we succeeded in finding a site in Puna, where we drilled a hole:
- Went down to a depth of 6450 feet (more than a mile) and found a production site with a temperature of 676 F, the hottest geothermal well in the world.
- Built a 3 megawatt demonstration plant, and fed electricity into the Big Island grid from 1981 to 1989.
- I created a program to utilize the deep ocean fluids for various applications, sort of similar to what we were doing on the other side of island with deep ocean water at the Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawaii.
- This success led to the development of Puna Geothermal Venture, now producing 38 MW of firm power, about 20% of the electric capacity of the Big Island.
- One important point about this option is that the electricity is baseload, available all the time, for both wind energy and solar power depend on the availability of winds and the sun.
- Soon after that First Energy Crisis of 1973, oil prices quadrupled from $3/barrel to $12/barrel. There was a further leap to $34/barrel after the second Energy Crisis in 1979.
- This jump triggered inflation, shortages and rationing of gasoline.
- Created was the Hawaii Natural Energy Institute, which became the premiere research organization for renewable energy in the Pacific.
- In parallel with the above, I could still spend my summers doing whatever I wanted.
- In 1974, James Dator and I joined a group of faculty members from California to run a summer public education program sponsored by NASA entitled Earth 2020--Visions for Our Children's Children, the first part was my idea, while the theme was contributed by the wife of Hans Mark, then director of the NASA Ames Research Center, the sponsoring organization.
- That experience led to my being invited in 1976 by that NASA Center to be part of a 20-professor team from across the nation on one of the first Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) initiatives, Project Orion, to detect an extrasolar planet (or exoplanet), that is, a planet revolving around another star, spearheaded by Barney Oliver and Jack Billingham. The first question asked of Cornell Professor Frank Drake was: “Extraterrestrial intelligence? How do you know there are even other planets outside our solar system?” So the faculty group was tasked to design a system to accomplish this feat. Why me? Well, I had an idea on how to do this, plus I long harbored visions that the cure for cancer and the solution to world peace might be beaming unto Planet Earth from advanced civilizations.
- Nobel Laureate Charles Townes had just come to the University of California at Berkeley, and had published a paper hinting that the potential for life on exoplanets could be determined by laser spiked starlight providing up to ten magnitudes of greater brilliance than the light that could be seen from telescopes.
- My contribution was to use a tunable laser as a key part of the system.
- Our report to NASA was called, To See the Impossible Dream: the Planetary Abstracting Trinterferometer (with an acronym of PAT), with a Man from La Mancha symbol on the cover, with a quote from Miguel de Cervantes:
To Man, the Don Quixote of the Universe,
May he succeed in his impossible dream.
- However, the policy of NASA in those days, to today, was to only utilize the microwave portion of the spectrum to search for alien signals. Ours was direct and optical.
- Here is one of my postings from seven years ago providing more details of this effort.
- We could have detected a planet orbiting a star in two years, or in the 1970s.
- Turned out that it was two decades years later, when extrasolar planet 51 Pegasi b was found by Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz, and they won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physics.
- Now, 6,298 exoplanets have been discovered across 4,700 different solar systems in the Universe.
Something tells me that Part 2 will have several postings, for I went on to the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to work on laser fusion, the U.S. Senate, where I wrote the original legislation for hydrogen, my return to the University of Hawaii to help create the Pacific International Center for High Technology Research, my 15-year period as director of the Hawaii Natural Energy Institute, and formative period for the Blue Revolution.
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