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Aug 9, 2022
Nuclear power’s biggest problem could have a small solution
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: nuclear energy, particle physics
For decades, if you asked a fusion scientist to picture a fusion reactor, they’d probably tell you about a tokamak. It’s a chamber about the size of a large room, shaped like a hollow doughnut. Physicists fill its insides with a not-so-tasty jam of superheated plasma. Then they surround it with magnets in the hopes of crushing atoms together to create energy, just as the sun does.
But experts think you can make tokamaks in other shapes. Some believe that making tokamaks smaller and leaner could make them better at handling plasma. If the fusion scientists proposing it are right, then it could be a long-awaited upgrade for nuclear energy. Thanks to recent research and a newly proposed reactor project, the field is seriously thinking about generating electricity with a “spherical tokamak.”
“The indication from experiments up to now is that [spherical tokamaks] may, pound for pound, confine plasmas better and therefore make better fusion reactors,” says Steven Cowley, director of Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.
Aug 9, 2022
Three papers highlight results of record 1.3 megajoule yield experiment
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: climatology, particle physics
After decades of inertial confinement fusion research, a yield of more than 1.3 megajoules (MJ) was achieved at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s (LLNL’s) National Ignition Facility (NIF) for the first time on Aug. 8, 2021, putting researchers at the threshold of fusion gain and achieving scientific ignition.
On the one-year anniversary of this historic achievement, the scientific results of this record experiment have been published in three peer-reviewed papers: one in Physical Review Letters and two in Physical Review E. More than 1,000 authors are included in one of the Physical Review Letters paper to recognize and acknowledge the many individuals who have worked over many decades to enable this significant advance.
“The record shot was a major scientific advance in fusion research, which establishes that fusion ignition in the lab is possible at NIF,” said Omar Hurricane, chief scientist for LLNL’s inertial confinement fusion program. “Achieving the conditions needed for ignition has been a long-standing goal for all inertial confinement fusion research and opens access to a new experimental regime where alpha-particle self-heating outstrips all the cooling mechanisms in the fusion plasma.”
Aug 9, 2022
Dolphins make peace and love—not war—when they encounter strangers
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: futurism
“Fascinating” study is a rare example of a smooth merger of different groups in animal kingdom.
Aug 9, 2022
World’s first living robots can now reproduce
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: robotics/AI
Aug 9, 2022
Why we need to worry about asteroids
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: space travel
Blue origin’s moon rocket engines.
Aug 9, 2022
Galaxy Cluster Near Earth Shows Signs Of Disturbance
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: space
An alternative gravity theory has been suggested by disturbances in dwarf galaxies within the nearest cluster of galaxies to Earth.
Aug 9, 2022
These software-controlled umbrellas in Medina, Saudi Arabia create the biggest convertible roof in the world
Posted by Raphael Ramos in category: futurism
Aug 9, 2022
2019 marked the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 lunar landing
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space travel
This incredible milestone changed the way humanity looked at our planet and access to deep space. The amazing events leading up to Apollo 11 and uncovers the fascinating future NASA has in store for space exploration.