captinjoehenry wrote:Hi this thought just occured to me. What is powering the temple? Because if it was nuclear powered a fission pile would have run out long ago they just cannot run for almost a thousand years without refueling. Now if it was a fusion plant that might work but then the temple would need a water intake from the lake so it could get a continuous supply of hydrogen. But a fusion plant would be readily detectable from quite a distance. Now it cannot be a hydroelectric plant as there is no where for the water to leave the temple. Also if the temple is using a geothermal plant then i would guess that there would not be that much exhaust heat. So i guess that the temple is powered by a geothermal power plant but that would have issues of its own. It cannot use wind or solar power as both would require above ground structures. So my best guess is that the temple is built on top of a natural gas or oil deposit and it is using some built in refinery allowing it to have a near limitless power supply.
So come one come all and share your thoughts on what exactly is keeping the mystical magical temple powered for all of these hundreds of years.
Geothermal tap is easy, you just need a deep enough hole. The deeper you go the hotter it gets. Drill down a couple of kilometers (typical oil well depths and you can get useful heat anywhere, inject water or ammonia with a low enough boiling point and stick a turbine or magnetohydrodynamic generator on the top (assuming you don't use thermoelectric generators (thermocouples)- therefore no moving parts). Waste heat gives you heating in winter, a pipe into the lake gives you a heat sink (and cooling in summer, but given the location in the near arctic, heating will be more important than cooling).
Nuclear power plants (either fusion or fission) able to run for centuries are complex beasts with large footprints, electromagnetic (including gamma emissions) and electrical signatures.