Nov 21 2006
Going Hyperbolic Over Home Fusion
Here is a piece on a Michigan kid who built a fusion generator in his garage. Who says kids today won’t amount to anything?
On the surface, Thiago Olson is like any typical teenager.
He’s on the cross country and track teams at Stoney Creek High School in Rochester Hills. He’s a good-looking, clean-cut 17-year-old with a 3.75 grade point average, and he has his eyes fixed on the next big step: college.
But to his friends, Thiago is known as “the mad scientist.”
In the basement of his parents’ Oakland Township home, tucked away in an area most aren’t privy to see, Thiago is exhausting his love of physics on a project that has taken him more than two years and 1,000 hours to research and build — a large, intricate machine that , on a small scale, creates nuclear fusion.
The article goes on to describe how he put the machine together and his future plans. His mom was initially concerned, though:
Thiago’s mom, Natalice Olson, initially was leery of the project, even though the only real danger from the fusion machine is the high voltage and small amount of X-rays emitted through a glass window in the vacuum chamber — through which Olson videotapes the fusion in action..
But, she wasn’t really surprised, since he was always coming up with lofty ideas.
“Originally, he wanted to build a hyperbolic chamber,” she said, adding that she promptly said no. But, when he came asking about the nuclear fusion machine, she relented.
I don’t think I’d let him build a hyperbolic chamber, either. There’s enough exaggeration as it is.











November 22nd, 2006 at 12:01 pm
Bah, when I was in high school, during metal shop, I built a really nice little tin tool box. I didn’t even have computers or the internet to help me figure it out. These kids nowadays have it easy.
November 26th, 2006 at 22:19 pm
Can I get this guy to be my lab partner?