Experiments show fusion plasma can stay stable at higher densities by controlling reactor walls, challenging long-standing limits.
According to findings published in Science Advances, scientists using China's Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak ...
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How are we solving fusion's toughest challenges?
In this video, I explore the challenges of nuclear fusion while visiting the JET tokamak fusion reactor at the Culham Science ...
US fusion energy developer Type One Energy has submitted the initial licensing application in preparation for the ...
Gadget Review on MSN
The 70-Year ‘Greenwald Limit' Just Shattered: How China's Artificial Sun Is Doing the Impossible With Plasma
China's EAST reactor achieved plasma densities 1.65x beyond theoretical limits, solving fusion's 70-year puzzle and bringing ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US to build critical fusion fuel breeding blanket facility as DOE, Japan’s firm team up
The US Department of Energy (DOE) and Kyoto Fusioneering (KF) today announced a landmark ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Record-breaking high-temperature superconductor wire for nuclear fusion tested by Russia
Engineers at the DV Efremov Institute of Electrophysical Apparatus (NIIEFA), a branch of Rosatom, ...
The machines at their center, called tokamaks, have evolved from experimental curiosities into instruments capable of ...
A drone mounted with cameras and sensors has been used for the first time to inspect the Joint European Torus former fusion research facility at the UK Atomic Energy Authority's Culham Campus, in ...
Engineers building the UK’s future fusion power plant have successfully tested a key new technology that could make fusion energy cheaper and easier to operate.
Humans have long been obsessed with building big, and as the world strives to combat climate change, megastructures may hold the key to a more sustainable future.
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