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Hot Fusion in a Can

Explore breakthrough nuclear fusion reactions using magnetized hydrogen injection, promising energy from nearly miniaturized reactors.

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Richard Siemen, a physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, thinks he's found a way to harness the nuclear fusion reactions that power the sun— and do it with a device not much bigger than a beer can. The long-standing obstacle to fusion power is that atomic nuclei strongly repel one another, and it takes some heavy-handed technology to bring them together. So far, after spending decades and billions of dollars on warehouse-sized reactors, researchers have yet to extract enough energy to power a flashlight. Siemen hopes to succeed where others failed by injecting heated and magnetized hydrogen into a 10-inch-long, 31/2-inch-wide aluminum cylinder and then shooting a 10- million-amp current into the can, which collapses and crushes its contents. Under those conditions, Siemen theorizes, the hydrogen should fuse, producing helium and a flood of high-speed neutrons whose energy can be converted to electricity. So far, he has imploded a can ...

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