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          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars

          by Anderson
          in Tech
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          MOST of the toffs who appear on TV’s Made In Chelsea dream only of becoming reality stars.

          But floppy-haired Richard Dinan is different. He spent much of his time on the E4 show dreaming about how to make a reality of travelling to the stars in the galaxy.

          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars
          Richard once dated Kimberley Garner
          Rex
          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars
          JOHN McLELLAN

          The former reality star is convinced that within five years Pulsar Fusion, the company that he has founded, will put a rocket into space[/caption]

          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars

          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars

          Since leaving MiC nine years ago, Richard, 35, a friend of Prince Harry, has become a ROCKET SCIENTIST.

          Now he and his team of boffins are developing a pioneering nuclear-powered spacecraft to carry humans to the outer reaches of the universe.
          Richard boldly predicts: “This could save humanity.”

          Doing all this in a warehouse on the outskirts of Milton Keynes is a far cry from his days in series three of MiC, when he wooed co-star Kimberley Garner with a helicopter flight to a luxury restaurant — only to find she was seeing someone else.

          After Richard left the show, his MiC pal Ollie Locke wrote a memoir entitled Laid In Chelsea.

          Read more on Richard Dinan

          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars

          MIND BLOWING

          What is a nuclear fusion and have scientists found a breakthrough?

          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars

          child genuis

          MIC boffin Richard Dinan is giving ‘wonderful mum’ Binky Felstead’s baby India a copy of his new science book

          But when Richard, whose cousin is Prince Harry’s ex Cressida Bonas, quit the series in 2013 he wrote a book all about the real love of his life, nuclear fusion.

          He is still in touch with co-stars Ollie, Kimberley and former lover and I’m A Celebrity contestant Georgia Toffolo, who all are all now following his space dream.

          Richard even gave a copy of his book, The Fusion Age: Modern Nuclear Reactors, to MiC cast member Binky Felstead’s baby India.

          He says: “Being the bloke from Made In Chelsea can be a good thing. But it has handicapped me in the way that people are keen to tear me down. So I’ve had to do my research doubly hard.”

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          Blue-blooded Richard — a grandson of the late Edward Richard Assheton Penn Curzon, 6th Earl Howe — quit the private St Edward’s School in Oxford at age 16.

          But for years he has been fascinated by the world of nuclear fusion, which is how the sun creates endless energy.

          Since leaving MiC, he has worked night and day to find a way to use nuclear energy to create a hyperspeed rocket that is capable of taking astronauts to other solar systems — just like in 2014 superhero movie Guardians Of The Galaxy.

          This is no pie-in-the-sky venture. The Government and Nasa scientists are backing him with money and expertise, and he is convinced that within five years Pulsar Fusion, the company that he has founded, will put a rocket into space.

          And not just any rocket, but one that will be able to travel at up to 217 miles a second and carry astronauts to Mars in just two weeks instead of the nine months current technology would take.

          Richard hopes that his team’s invention will even enable humans to find a new home in space.

          In the unlikely setting of his warehouse next to an empty carpet-tile depot near MK Dons’ football stadium, his £200million dream is slowly coming together.

          Here Richard and his team have built a nuclear fusion reactor which creates the ultra-high vacuum needed to produce a “mini sun” inside a stainless steel vessel that resembles a small space-craft. Nearby, two prototype rockets which will take the mini reactor into space lie side by side in the hi-tech workshop.

          They have already been successfully fired, at the UK’s National Propulsion Test Facility at Westcott, Bucks, and on a track in Switzerland.
          Flicking back his long, blond hair, Richard says: “Fusion offers two things, ability to provide all the energy the Earth will need for ever, and the ability to leave our solar system. It could save humanity.

          “The Alpha Centauri star system, which has habitable planets, is more than four light years away, 25trillion miles. Currently it would take many hundreds of lifetimes to get there.

          But with nuclear fusion the journey would take just 11 years.” Nuclear fusion is a way of copying the way the sun fuses atoms into a plasma that creates intense heat and light, which could give the world limitless cheap low-carbon energy.

          Fusion is safer than nuclear fission — where atoms are split to create electricity and bombs — but it is harder to create and control.
          Apprentice gunsmith

          Richard says: “I know fusion works. Scientists tried for a century but couldn’t stabilise it. It would vibrate, like water coming out the tap pretty quickly, and that is chaos theory. But today fusion reactors are starting to work.

          “That is because super-computers are getting better, magnets are getting better and we understand how to hold that plasma to the point where we get energy out. Nuclear has a bad name because humans used its power to create weapons but there is a totally safe, clean other side to it.

          “Similar technology that allowed us to do the worst thing we have ever done will give us the ability to do the best thing we will ever do — generate abundant, powerful clean energy.”

          Building a nuclear fusion power station would cost billions and take ten to 15 years. Richard does not have that much time or money. Instead he wants to use nuclear fusion in space.

          His plan is to build three rockets that, by 2027, will launch from Earth. One will carry a small nuclear fusion reactor. The three will then be manoeuvred in space and joined to make one giant spaceship.

          Powered by nuclear fusion, this will be able to travel at a dizzying 500,000 miles an hour.

          Richard walked out of school during GCSEs and went to work as an apprentice gunsmith. But all the time he was creating companies and inventing things.

          He signed up for MiC to build a Twitter following and because the show’s producers would let him demonstrate some of his inventions, including a bracelet that would open your car door.

          After leaving MiC he then set out to become a rocket scientist. Lugging an 18in lump of meteorite in his bag, he even secured an interview with Britain’s leading nuclear boffin Sir Steve Cowley, former head of the UK Atomic Energy Authority, to discuss his ideas.

          Richard says: “I had to speak to the best brains and he is one of the best, and thankfully he didn’t say, ‘You’re not a scientist, go home Chelsea person’.”

          Richard was also inspired by TV stargazer Professor Brian Cox, who he met at the 2013 wedding of Virgin tycoon Richard Branson’s son, Sam.

          But Richard does not have even an A level in physics, so he hired tutor Dr James Lambert, who he then later took on as Pulsar Fusion’s chief engineer.

          The firm has also recruited Nasa scientist Zaheer Ali, and rocket scientists from Virgin Galactic and the European Space Programme, and their work is checked by experts at Southampton University.

          Richard has ruled out ever returning to reality TV. He says: “I seriously hope to have a reactor in space before I’m 40.”

          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars
          MIC stars Gemma Gregory, Gabriella Tristao, Kimberley Garner and Richard Dinan pictured in 2012
          Rex Features
          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars
          www.jarekduk.com

          Powered by nuclear fusion – the rockets will be able to travel at a dizzying 500,000 miles an hour[/caption]

          How Made In Chelsea toff Richard Dinan became an expert in nuclear fusion – and plans to send a mission to Mars
          Richard is cousins with Prince Harry’s ex Cressida Bonas
          Rex

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During this time, Japanese culture developed with little to no foreign influence. The kosode was an essential part of what it meant to be Japanese. The kosode was a visible cultural marker throughout the Edo period. It was worn by all Japanese people, regardless of their age, gender, or socioeconomic status. When a Japanese person came into contact with a foreigner, one noticeable difference was that foreigners did not wear kosode. Edo kosode is thus a window into a culture on the verge of a major shift. The kosode (kimono) was traditionally made up of twelve layers, which is why it was given the name "Juni–hitoe"–"Juni" in Japanese means "twelve." The number of layers is now fewer, as twelve layers are pretty heavy. Men's formal obis are substantially thinner than women's (the maximum width is roughly 10 centimeters (3.9 in)). Men's obis are worn far more easily than women's: they are wrapped around the waist, below the stomach, and knotted in the rear with a simple knot. Additionally, there are also various types of kimonos. One of the most well-known among them is the Yukata. The yukata is a type of kimono that is more casual. It's perfect for wearing during the summer to events like Japanese street festivals, anime conventions, or simply to have a good time in town. This type of kimono is widely regarded as ideal for anyone who is new to wearing kimonos because it requires few accessories. For most tourists, this is the first type of kimono they are exposed to in Japan. The Yukata is typically made of a cotton print cloth, and the majority of current Yukata are mass-produced. The Yukata can be worn as a bathrobe or as loungewear. It can be worn in the bath or to supper and breakfast, and to bed as sleepwear. Additionally, the Yukata is worn differently by men and women. Yukata are most popular in the summer when the unlined cotton fabric is best for keeping cool in hot weather. They can be worn daily. However, it is most common to see young people enjoying them during Hanabi (Japanese fireworks viewing holidays). The Edo period in Japan was stratified, like other societies. In this period, people were defined by their style, motif, fabric, technique, and color. Given that everyone wore kosode at the time and the cut didn't alter much, notes were stitched into the fabric to identify the wearer. Sumptuary regulations were frequently applied to them as well. As a result, Kosode and art and design become inextricably linked. Although at the time everyone wore the kosode, since the kosode from the lower classes was worn to tatters, hardly any of their kosode survived. Higher socioeconomic strata of society, on the other hand, were able to retain and preserve their kosode while also commissioning new ones. Kosode, like different kinds of art such as painting, poetry, ceramics, and lacquerware, followed aesthetic rules. The biggest reason why kosode, later named kimonos, was so expensive is because they could not be mass-produced effectively. The garment's structure was such that a large majority of its seams and edges could not be sewn by a machine. Another reason for this high price was the materials used to design the kosode. Traditionally, the materials used included hemp, linen, silk, silk brocade, silk crepes (chirimen), and satin weaves (rinzin). Nowadays, modern kimonos use less-expensive, easy-care fabrics like rayon, cotton satin cotton, polyester, and other synthetic materials. Fabric quality, pattern selection, thread, paint, wood-block print, and color were all crucial factors in portraying the wearer’s status, age, gender, and level of refinement. For example, literary prowess was demonstrated by kanji (Chinese characters) and scenes from Chinese and Japanese classical literature. The color of the traditional kimono also depends on the season and occasion. For example, pale colors such as light green are appropriate for spring, while cool colors such as lavender or dark blue are good for summer. Autumn calls for colors that imitate the hues of the turning leaves, and winter is the season for solid colors like black and red. Intricate embroideries enhance the beauty of a plain silk kimono. Printed kimonos in both light and dark colors were popular for casual wear among men and women. For formal occasions, men wear a montsuki, which is a standard black silk kimono worn over a white under-kimono and hakama, traditional Japanese trousers. Design manuals were vital with the early modern kosode because there were so many intricacies. From the commissioning customer to the textile store owners to the designers, everyone used this Hinagata bon (design/pattern books). Shinsen O-Hinagata is the first Hinagata bon we know of, dating from 1666. (A New Selection of Respected Patterns). Hinagata bon was written by the most respected artists of the time, ukiyo-e (floating world) artists, demonstrating how kosode were true works of art. Early modern Japanese offered us an extraordinary glimpse into their environment and what it meant to be Japanese before outside influence through their use of art. Each piece of clothing was considered a wearer's biodata. Similarly, Edo kosode and Hinagata bon are the biodata of a generation. As a result, the kimono encapsulates so much of what it means to be Japanese and why it was so crucial in post-Edo Japan. In an era of fast modernization and foreign influence, the kosode-cum-kimono preserved a piece of traditional Japanese culture. The "wearing thing" was renamed during the Meiji period, and women, in particular, were encouraged to wear it. In context, Meiji law encouraged males to wear the Western dress at official gatherings and required it for government officials and military members. The wearing of kimonos provided a soothing reminder during the Meiji period, when Japan was undergoing profound transformation on multiple levels. The kimono became a visible yet unseen relationship between lady, mother, and cultural guardian. Even now, the kimono serves as a reminder of Japan's basic culture before its major transformation. As mentioned previously, until the 1930s, most Japanese women wore the kimono, and Western clothing was restricted to specific social levels for usage outside the home. The Japanese have since adapted and adopted western clothing styles from the United States and Europe. The kimono is now primarily used for special occasions such as weddings, festivals, and funerals. Tourists can also rent a kimono for the day and experience the sights in traditional Japanese style. kimonos are worn mainly by women nowadays, and only on special occasions. When compared to Western clothing, the kimono tends to restrict movement. 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