At the end of last year, Germany switched on a new type of massive nuclear fusion reactor for the first time, and it was successfully able to contain a scorching hot blob of helium plasma.
But since then, there's been a big question - is the device working the way it's supposed to? That's pretty crucial when you're talking about a machine that could potentially maintain controlled nuclear fusion reactions one day, and thankfully, the answer is yes.
A team of researchers from the US and Germany have now confirmed that the Wendelstein 7-X (W 7-X) stellerator is producing the super-strong, twisty, 3D magnetic fields that its design predicted, with "unprecedented accuracy". The researchers found an error rate less than one in 100,000.
(Score: 4, Informative) by bob_super on Tuesday December 06 2016, @11:47PM
Not just in proximity of each other, but far away from walls, windings and people which wouldn't be very happy to meet them up close, even if there aren't too many of them for now.
I like calling the fission igniter explosion a "containment". A 100t hydraulic press is also a container, I guess.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 07 2016, @02:41AM
"Containment" (in this context) refers to its relationship to the object being contained.
A press is only a container if it is containing something in that might come out...
I nuclear fission reactor that fails to contain plasma is just a giant, incredible expensive metal donut...