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<blockquote data-quote="jay hay-char" data-source="post: 1336074" data-attributes="member: 116810"><p>I think this report is getting slightly ahead of the game <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite1" alt=":)" title="Smile :)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":)" />. What they've done is to produce a machine that can create an environment, currently for one tenth of a second, in which fusion can theoretically take place. There's a way to go yet, before we actually get fusion. I have an uncle, now retired, who is a plasma physicist and who worked on the fusion project at Princetown University for most of his career. He reckons that large scale, affordable fusion that creates more energy than it consumes is still thirty or forty years off, although he would be delighted to be proved wrong.</p><p></p><p>If it can be achieved it will, indeed, revolutionise the generation of energy and pretty much solve future problems in that area.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jay hay-char, post: 1336074, member: 116810"] I think this report is getting slightly ahead of the game :). What they've done is to produce a machine that can create an environment, currently for one tenth of a second, in which fusion can theoretically take place. There's a way to go yet, before we actually get fusion. I have an uncle, now retired, who is a plasma physicist and who worked on the fusion project at Princetown University for most of his career. He reckons that large scale, affordable fusion that creates more energy than it consumes is still thirty or forty years off, although he would be delighted to be proved wrong. If it can be achieved it will, indeed, revolutionise the generation of energy and pretty much solve future problems in that area. [/QUOTE]
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