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Science & Technology
US scientists recreate nuclear fusion in lab, achieve higher yields
2023-08-08
[GEO.TV] Scientists in the US achieved greater energy after conducting nuclear fusion, as they were also behind a breakthrough of a historic nuclear fusion carried out in December last year, reported AFP Monday.

The world was amazed in December as the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory announced it had carried out an experimental nuclear reaction that put out more energy than was put into it — a holy grail of science in the quest for unlimited — clean power to bring an end to the use of fossil fuels.

"We can confirm the experiment produced a higher yield than the December 2022 experiment," public information officer Paul Rhien said Monday in a statement, without providing further details.

He added: "The Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, lab planned to report the results at upcoming scientific conferences and in peer-reviewed publications."

The nuclear fusion was first reported by the Financial Times.

Nuclear fusion is regarded as a clean, abundant, and safe source of energy that could eventually allow humans to ditch coal, crude oil, natural gas, and other hydrocarbons that are behind the global climate crisis.

However,
alcohol has never solved anybody's problems. But then, neither has milk...
it is a long journey before fusion is viable on an industrial scale, providing power to residences and commercial spaces.

Nuclear power plants around the world currently use fission — the splitting of a heavy atom’s nucleus — to produce energy.

Fusion on the other hand combines two light hydrogen atoms to form one heavier helium atom, releasing a large amount of energy in the process.

On Earth, nuclear fusion reactions can be provoked by heating hydrogen to extreme temperatures inside specialised devices.

Like fission, fusion is carbon-free during operation, and has additional critical advantages: it poses no risk of nuclear disaster and produces much less radioactive waste.

During December’s experiment, the lab used 192 ultra-powerful lasers to deliver 2.05 megajoules of energy to a tiny capsule smaller than a pea containing isotopes of hydrogen. It produced 3.15 megajoules of fusion energy output.

While the result was a net energy gain, 300 megajoules of energy were needed from the electrical grid to power the lasers.
Posted by:Fred

#4  We only need a steady cheap supply of Unobtanium to have Fusion tomorrow!
Posted by: magpie   2023-08-08 18:00  

#3  Practical fusion energy is 10 years away. And has been for the last thirty or forty years.
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia   2023-08-08 09:58  

#2  ..and they're testing in CA which is shutting down reactors.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2023-08-08 07:38  

#1  Don't mean shit unless we can get a reactor to produce Tritium on an industrial level. The main source is a nuclear reactor in Canada, and that is getting shut down soon. Most expensive element on the market at $30,000 per gram. Without it or something else to replace it, fusion is a dead dream.
Posted by: DarthVader   2023-08-08 00:47  

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