Nuclear fission (the process by which nuclear power plants produce
energy) is much easier to control than nuclear fusion (the process by
which the sun burns, and nuclear weapons work). Small nuclear fusion
reactors have been built, but a large-scale, sustainable fusion reactor
has yet to be attempted—until now. A consortium of seven member bodies
(the US, EU, Russia, China, Japan, South Korea, and India) has chosen a
location in France to build the world first. And while even its champions concede it could be decades before it’s dispensing energy, nuclear fusion is cleaner and yields three to four times more power than fusion.
The project is called ITER, for International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, and it is the second-largest cooperative international scientific endeavor (ranking behind only the Space Station). It will use a donut-shaped magnetic field to contain gases that will reach temperatures comparable to those at the core of the sun, in excess of 150 million degree C
(270 million F), and will produce 10 times more power than it consumes.
The project is called ITER, for International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, and it is the second-largest cooperative international scientific endeavor (ranking behind only the Space Station). It will use a donut-shaped magnetic field to contain gases that will reach temperatures comparable to those at the core of the sun, in excess of 150 million degree C
(270 million F), and will produce 10 times more power than it consumes.
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