Our dreams of nuclear fusion are drawing ever nearer thanks to a scientific leap forward in Germany. On Wednesday, a team of researchers at Max Planck Institute in Greifswald switched on the Wendelstein 7-X stellarator for
the very first time with a little help from Chancellor Angela Merkel.
It was a fitting honor for Time Magazine’s Person of the Year, as Merkel
herself is a physicist. With temperatures reaching 80 million degrees
Celsius, the stellarator successfully generated its first hydrogen
plasma, bringing us closer to nuclear fusion power.
Nuclear fusion, which involves the combination of two
lighter atomic nuclei into one heavy nucleus, generates a
massive amount of energy that physicists believe can be harvested as an
incredibly clean energy source.The $435 million device will be instrumental in scientists’ attempts to test the potential of a fusion reactor, and its operation yesterday is just the beginning of further work that will determine its “suitability for use in a power plant.” When Merkel pressed a button yesterday, the stellarator generated “a 2-megawatt pulse of microwave” which “transformed a tiny quantity of hydrogen gas into an extremely hot low-density hydrogen plasma.” This, scientists say, allows for the “separation of the electrons from the nuclei of the hydrogen atoms.”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/germany-makes-landmark-fusion-power-191453294.html
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