Had JET been a commercial power plant rather than an experimental setup, the energy output could have powered approximately ...
Using nuclear fusion, the process that powers the stars, to produce electricity on Earth has famously been 30 years away for ...
Two important barriers to a stable, powerful fusion reaction have been leapt by an experiment in a small tokamak reactor, but ...
A team of scientists at the United Kingdom's Joint European Torus facility set a record by producing 69 megajoules of fusion ...
The Joint European Torus (JET), one of the world's largest and most powerful fusion machines, has demonstrated the ability to reliably generate fusion energy, while simultaneously setting a world ...
Scientists have set a new fusion energy world record, producing 69 megajoules at the Joint European Torus (JET) in the UK. The "major scientific achievement" was the lab's final experiment ...
We’ve had nuclear fission reactors in operation all over the world for ages, but nuclear fusion always ... With next month’s JET deuterium-tritium fuel experiments the goal is to see whether ...
All experiments at the Joint European Torus (JET) facility in Oxfordshire ended in December. Nuclear fusion still remains a long way off but brings the world one step closer to endless clean energy.
At this point the Joint European Torus (JET) reactor holds the world record ... although it won’t begin fusion experiments until the mid-2030s. The idea is that ITER will provide the data ...
A week earlier, on December 5, an experiment carried ... Almost all nuclear fusion research is carried out in tokamaks of varying sizes—from small ones like USP’s to large ones, like the Joint ...
During this experiment, JET averaged a fusion power of around 11 megawatts (megajoules per second). The previous energy record from a fusion experiment, achieved by JET in 1997, was 22 megajoules ...