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China Boasts Successful Nuclear Fusion

China Boasts Successful Nuclear Fusion

Energy News Beat Publishers Note (ENB): This is great news! The fact that the Chinese have harnessed the Sun and have a flawless track record of telling the truth. With a fusion reactor disaster, it would make Chernobyl look like a trip through Wall Mart on Halloween. So if they did make the breakthrough and sustained a fusion reaction, it could be the energy savior for humanity, and it could be the end of mankind. I am a big Nuclear fan and think that it is the best solution for providing the lowest kWh to people in all walks of life regardless of income. I am not a fan of a government that will harm its citizens with no regard for life. 

Chinese media have reported that researchers working on a nuclear fusion project have succeeded in holding plasma of 120 million degrees Celsius for close to two minutes.

Chinese daily Global Times reports that the so-called artificial sun as the Chinese nuclear fusion project is known also succeeded in maintaining plasma at 160 million degrees Celsius for 20 seconds.

These times, while not very long in absolute terms, are records in the quest for nuclear fusion. The next step would be to maintain these temperatures for as long as a week, according to a physics professor from the Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen.

China’s nuclear fusion reactor first made headlines in 2019 when Beijing said it would soon begin operations. The reactor—the HL-2M Tokamak—was first powered at the end of last year, and its first achievement was maintaining a temperature of 100 million degrees Celsius for 100 minutes.

Nuclear fusion has become something of a modern-day philosopher’s stone. The process holds great promise for the generation of energy but making it work has proven a challenge because while the process of fusion itself is possible, it consumes more energy than it releases, which is the opposite of the goal.

Russia also recently reported nuclear fusion news. Earlier this month, state media said the T-15MD tokamak had been powered for the first time.

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