Zestaw obrazów 2019
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On 9 October 2014 the European Commission officially launched the European Consortium for the Development of Fusion Energy, EUROfusion for short. EUROfusion manages the European fusion research activities on behalf of Euratom, which awards the appropriate grant to the consortium. The new consortium agreement will substitute the fourteen year-old European Fusion Development Agreement (EFDA), as well as 29 bilateral Association agreements between the Commission and research institutions in 27 countries. The Grant Agreement (contract) provides €424M in funding from the Euratom Horizon 2020 programme 2014-18 and the same amount from Member States, adding up to an overall budget of €850 million for 5 years.
The launch of EUROfusion was celebrated with Europe’s fusion research community in the heart of the European Quarter, the Solvay Library. Robert-Jan Smits, Director-General DG Research & Innovation, opened the event in the presence of the Heads of EUROfusion Research Units, Members of the European Parliament and representatives of the European Commission. In his welcome address, Vice-President and European Commissioner for Energy, Günther Oettinger noted that “Europe sets the path to commercialization of fusion energy.” Prof. Sibylle Günter, Scientific Director of Max-Planck-Institute for Plasmaphysics, Germany, and Chair of the EUROfusion General Assembly, introduced the EUROfusion consortium and its research programme. She also thanked everybody who contributed to the sucess. Günter presented the roadmap to the realisation of fusion energy, which forms the basis for all EUROfusion activities. “The EUROfusion work plan is designed to exploit synergies and ensure excellence in the best possible way,” she pointed out. In his keynote address about fusion energy and fusion research in general, Prof. Steve Cowley, Director of Culham Centre for Fusion Energy (CCFE), UK, said: “It it is a wonderful time to work in fusion and the most important”.
At mid-day, Robert-Jan Smits and Sibylle Günter signed the grant agreement between EUROfusion and the European Commission, thus marking the official start of the Consortium. “It is an historic event as this is the European research organisation with the most member states, “ said EUROfusion Programme Manager Prof. Tony Donné. “For the first time we are bringing together 27 countries to work on a common scientific goal – fusion electricity by 2050.”
Dr. András Siegler, Director for Energy Research, DG Research & Innovation, opened the afternoon session. “Now that all contracts are signed we can focus on the research,” he said. Former EFDA Leader Prof. Francesco Romanelli looked both back and forward in this talk about the transition from EFDA to the Joint Programme under EUROfusion. He pointed out the pragmatic approach of Fusion Roadmap. “My advice,” he said, “don’t look for the ultimate solution.” A panel discussion between Tony Donné, Dr. Thomas Mull, AREVA and member of the Fusion Industry Innovation Forum, Dr. Catherine Cesarksy, former Chair of CCE-FU (Consultative Committee for the EURATOM specific research and training in the field of nuclear energy (fusion)), Prof. Niek-Lopes Cardozo, Chair of the Fusion Education Network FuseNet and Dr. Sandor Zoletnik, Head of the RMI-Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Budapest, completed the event.
Background:
The formation of EUROfusion marks a big step forward for Europe’s quest to develop fusion power as a climate-friendly energy source that will contribute to meet a growing global energy demand. The EUROfusion Consortium enables Europe’s national laboratories to pool their resources even more efficiently – a measure which became necessary to meet the challenge of increasingly complex and large-scale projects such as ITER and DEMO. The preparation for such a joint fusion programme started in 2012. All EU research laboratories jointly drafted a detailed goal-oriented programme to realise fusion energy by 2050. This programme, known as the ‘Roadmap to the Realisation of Fusion Electricity’ outlines the most efficient path to fusion power. The roadmap has two main aims: Preparing for ITER experiments in order to ensure that Europe makes best possible use of ITER and to develop concepts for a fusion power demonstration plant DEMO. The necessary research towards reaching these aims is carried out by universities and research centres within the current European Framework Programme Horizon 2020. More than before does the programme involve industries in the process of designing components and finding technical solutions.
Source: euro-fusion.org
Nuclear fusion could become the main source of energy in the second half of this century, and Europe is well-positioned to lead the way as long as it manages its resources correctly, according to the people overseeing the research.
‘The world is really looking at us,’ said Professor Sibylle Günter, scientific director of the Germany-based Institute for Plasma Physics, which is coordinating EUROfusion, a new initiative pooling fusion research in Europe due to be officially launched on 9 October. ‘Europe has the opportunity to strengthen its world-leading position here because we have such a broad and well-organised fusion programme.’
Scientists believe nuclear fusion has the potential to meet a large proportion of the world’s energy demand in a cost-effective way. Unlike nuclear fission, which powers the nuclear reactors used today, nuclear fusion does not produce long-lived radioactive waste and is not subject to the same safety concerns.
Instead, nuclear fusion uses the same energy that powers the sun – heating hydrogen atoms to millions of degrees Celsius so that they fuse together into helium, generating energy in the process. However, the big challenge is maintaining the conditions and extremely high temperatures needed for the fusion reaction, and extracting useful heat for electricity generation.
To solve this, regions representing over half the world’s population have joined forces to build ITER – the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor – in the hills of Provence, southern France, in a concerted effort to show that the technology can produce at least ten times more energy than it consumes.
The doughnut-shaped reactor, known as a tokamak, which will burn at ten times the temperature of the core of the sun, is expected to start producing a significant net gain in energy. It should produce a power output equivalent to that of a medium-sized power plant.
The success of ITER is crucial. Once the viability of nuclear fusion as a realistic source of energy has been demonstrated, the idea is to use the lessons from ITER to build a demonstration reactor, known for the moment as DEMO, which is expected to start contributing energy to the power grid around 2050.
DEMO will form the template for fusion reactors that can be built across the world, in theory enabling fusion to meet the world’s energy needs in conjunction with renewable energy such as wind and solar power.
‘You just have to imagine what the impacts are for mankind as a whole,’ said Simon Webster, the head of the fusion research unit at the European Commission. ‘It’s absolutely phenomenal what this can deliver when you look at the future needs for energy, the growth of world population, and the growing percentage of energy that will need to be provided by electricity generation. Fusion can tick all these boxes.’
However, energy provision is a political, as well as scientific, decision. Final decisions on DEMO are for the future, once ITER has attained its objectives. Whether this project is an international collaboration like ITER, or whether regions will wish to go it alone remains to be seen. China has already pushed ahead in fusion energy and has developed its own tokamak experiment known as EAST, which is situated in the eastern city of Hefei, and is now planning a more advanced fusion energy test reactor.
‘We could do DEMO in the same way (as the planned new Chinese reactor) and say, “OK we are going to build DEMO, we are open to any collaborations with other parties, but this is how we do it, we need a central team with a budget. If other partners want to join, fine”,’ said Professor Tony Donné, the Programme Manager of EUROfusion.
One of the biggest problems facing fusion is the issue of exhaust heat – how to extract useful heat for energy generation. At the moment scientists are developing materials which are tough enough to withstand the the high temperatures and neutron bombardment for long periods of time.
Long-term continuous operation of a tokamak is also an issue, but the EUROfusion programme is also studying an alternative configuration known as a stellarator.
Engineers in Germany recently finished building Wendelstein 7-X, the world’s biggest stellarator, which is now being commissioned prior to the start of operation in 2015.
Whether final commercial reactors take the tokamak or the stellarator design, scientists are confident that fusion can become the world’s leading source of power after 2050, and that people will look back to the roadmap drawn up by Europe’s scientists in 2012. ‘They will be able to see a direct trail from what we are setting up now,’ Webster said.
Source: euro-fusion.org
On 9 October 2014 the European Commission invites the fusion community into the heart of the European Quarter, the Solvay Library, to officially launch the European Consortium for the Development of Fusion Energy, EUROfusion for short. The new consortium agreement will substitute the fourteen year-old European Fusion Development Agreement (EFDA), as well as 29 bilateral Association agreements between the Commission and research institutions in 27 countries.
The formation of EUROfusion marks a big step forward for Europe’s quest to develop fusion power as a climate-friendly energy source that will contribute to meet a growing global energy demand. The EUROfusion Consortium enables Europe’s national laboratories to pool their resources even more efficiently – a measure which became necessary to meet the challenge of increasingly complex and large-scale projects such as ITER and DEMO.
The preparation for such a joint fusion programme started in 2012. All EU research laboratories jointly drafted a detailed goal-oriented programme to realise fusion energy by 2050. This programme, known as the ‘Roadmap to the Realisation of Fusion Electricity’ outlines the most efficient path to fusion power. By the end of that year it was endorsed by all parties.
The roadmap has two main aims: Preparing for ITER experiments in order to ensure that Europe makes best possible use of ITER and to develop concepts for a fusion power demonstration plant DEMO. The necessary research towards reaching these aims is carried out by universities and research centres within the current European Framework Programme Horizon 2020. More than before does the programme involve industries in the process of designing components and finding technical solutions.
Through EUROfusion, the European fusion research programme will have direct access to various European experiments that are relevant to fulfil roadmap missions. The world’s largest magnetic fusion experiment, the Joint European Torus (JET) in Culham, UK, will continue to be exploited by EUROfusion until 2018. JET, often nicknamed “Little ITER”, has already been paving the way for ITER and continues to align its scientific programme to ITER needs.
The Solvay library is the ideal venue for the launch of EUROfusion: inaugurated in 1902 its architecture accommodated new ways of academic teaching. The new architecture of EUROfusion strengthens Europe’s leading position in fusion research by integrating a strong central programming.
Source: EFDA.org
The experimental work is described in a paper to be published in the Sept. 24 Physical Review Letters online. A theoretical PRL paper to be published on the same date helps explain why the experimental method worked. The combined work demonstrates the viability of the novel approach.
"We are committed to shaking this [fusion] tree until either we get some good apples or a branch falls down and hits us on the head," said Sandia senior manager Dan Sinars. He expects the project, dubbed MagLIF for magnetized liner inertial fusion, will be "a key piece of Sandia's submission for a July 2015 National Nuclear Security Administration review of the national Inertial Confinement Fusion Program."
Inertial confinement fusion creates nanosecond bursts of neutrons, ideal for creating data to plug into supercomputer codes that test the safety, security and effectiveness of the U.S. nuclear stockpile. The method could be useful as an energy source down the road if the individual fusion pulses can be sequenced like an automobile's cylinders firing.
MagLIF uses a laser to preheat hydrogen fuel, a large magnetic field to squeeze the fuel and a separate magnetic field to keep charged atomic particles from leaving the scene.
It only took the two magnetic fields and the laser, focused on a small amount of fusible material called deuterium (hydrogen with a neutron added to its nucleus), to produce a trillion fusion neutrons (neutrons created by the fusing of atomic nuclei). Had tritium (which carries two neutrons) been included in the fuel, scientific rule-of-thumb says that 100 times more fusion neutrons would have been released. (That is, the actual release of 10 to the 12th neutrons would be upgraded, by the more reactive nature of the fuel, to 10 to the 14th neutrons.)
Still, even with this larger output, to achieve break-even fusion—as much power out of the fuel as placed into it—100 times more neutrons (10 to the 16th) would have to be produced.
The gap is sizable, but the technique is a toddler, with researchers still figuring out the simplest measures: how thick or thin key structural elements of the design should be and the relation between the three key aspects of the approach—the two magnetic fields and the laser.
The first paper, "Experimental Demonstration of Fusion-Relevant Conditions in Magnetized Liner inertial fusion," (MagLIF) by Sandia lead authors Matt Gomez, Steve Slutz and Adam Sefkow, describes a fusion experiment remarkably simple to visualize. The deuterium target atoms are placed within a long thin tube called a liner. A magnetic field from two pancake-shaped (Helmholtz) coils above and below the liner creates an electromagnetic curtain that prevents charged particles, both electrons and ions, from escaping. The extraordinarily powerful magnetic field of Sandia's Z machine then crushes the liner like an athlete crushing a soda can, forcefully shoving atoms in the container into more direct contact. As the crushing begins, a laser beam preheats the deuterium atoms, infusing them with energy to increase their chances of fusing at the end of the implosion. (A nuclear reaction occurs when an atom's core is combined with that of another atom, releasing large amounts of energy from a small amount of source material. That outcome is important in stockpile stewardship and, eventually, in civilian energy production.) Trapped energized particles including fusion-produced alpha particles (two neutrons, two protons) also help maintain the high temperature of the reaction.
"On a future facility, trapped alpha particles would further self-heat the plasma and increase the fusion rate, a process required for break-even fusion or better," said Sefkow.
The actual MagLIF procedure follows this order: The Helmholtz coils are turned on for a few thousandths of a second. Within that relatively large amount of time, a 19-megaAmpere electrical pulse from Z, with its attendant huge magnetic field, fires for about 100 nanoseconds or less than a millionth of a second with a power curve that rises to a peak and then falls in intensity. Just after the 50-nanosecond mark, near the current pulse's peak intensity, the laser, called Z-Beamlet, fires for several nanoseconds, warming the fuel.
According to the paper's authors, the unusual arrangement of using magnetic forces both to collapse the tube and simultaneously insulate the fuel, keeping it hot, means researchers could slow down the process of creating fusion neutrons. What had been a precipitous process using X-rays or lasers to collapse a small unmagnetized sphere at enormous velocities of 300 kilometers per second, can happen at about one-quarter speed at a much more "modest" 70 km/sec. ("Modest" only comparatively; the speed is about six times greater than that needed to put a satellite in orbit.)
The slower pace allows more time for fusible reactions to take place. The more benign implosion also means fewer unwanted materials from the collapsing liner mix into the fusion fuel, which would cool it and prevent fusion from occurring. By analogy, a child walking slowly in the ocean's shallows stirs less mud than a vigorously running child.
Sandia senior scientist Mike Campbell said, "This experiment showed that fusion will still occur if a plasma is heated by slow, rather than rapid, compression. With rapid compression, if you mix materials emitted from the tube's restraining walls into the fuel, the fusion process won't work; also, increased acceleration increases the growth of instabilities. A thicker can [tube] is less likely to be destroyed when contracted, which would dump unwanted material into the deuterium mix, and you also reduce instabilities, so you win twice."
Besides the primary deuterium fusion neutron yields, the team's measurements also found a smaller secondary deuterium-tritium neutron signal, about a hundredfold larger than what would have been expected without magnetization, providing a smoking gun for the existence of extreme magnetic fields.
The question remained whether it was indeed the secondary magnetic field that caused the 100-fold increase in this additional neutron pulse, or some other, still unknown cause. Fortunately, the pulse has a distinct nuclear signature arising from the interaction of tritium nuclei as they slow down and react with the primary deuterium fuel, and that interaction was detected by Sandia sensors.
The secondary magnetic field is the subject of the second, theoretical paper, "Understanding fuel magnetization and mix using secondary nuclear reactions in magneto-inertial fusion." Using simulations, Sandia researchers Paul Schmit, Patrick Knapp, et al confirmed the existence and effect of extreme magnetic fields. Their calculations showed that the tritium nuclei would be encouraged by these magnetic fields to move along tight helical paths. This confinement increased the probability of subsequently fusing with the main deuterium fuel.
"This dramatically increases the probability of fusion," Schmit said. "That it happened validates a critical component of the MagLIF concept as a viable pathway forward for fusion. Our work has helped show that MagLIF experiments are already beginning to explore conditions that will be essential to achieving high yield and/or ignition in the future."
The foundation of Sandia's MagLIF work is based on work led by Slutz. In a 2010 Physics of Plasmas article, Slutz showed that a tube enclosing preheated deuterium and tritium, crushed by the large magnetic fields of the 27-million-ampere Z machine and a secondary magnetic field, would yield slightly more energy than is inserted into it.
A later simulation, published January 2012 in Physical Review Letters by Slutz and Sandia researcher Roger Vesey, showed that a more powerful accelerator generating 60 million amperes or more could reach "high-gain" fusion conditions, where the fusion energy released exceeds by more than 1,000 times the energy supplied to the fuel.
A paper led by Sefkow et al, published July 24, in Physics of Plasmas, further explicated and designed the experiments based on predictions made in Slutz's earlier paper.
But, said Campbell, "there is still a long way to go."
Source: phys.org
The small WEGA fusion device at Max Planck Institute of Plasma Physics (IPP) in Greifswald is being handed over to the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign. The "Wendelstein-Experiment in Greifswald für die Ausbildung" (Wendelstein Experiment in Greifswald for Training) is making room for the Wendelstein 7-X large-scale device. Urbana is succeeding Greifswald, Stuttgart and Grenoble as fourth site for the sturdy device.
WEGA has been in operation at IPP Greifswald since 2001. The small, but versatile fusion device was used for training students and young scientific personnel to bridge the time till completion of the Wendelstein 7-X large-scale device. At the end of 2013 its time was up and WEGA had to be shut down; its place was needed for setting up the technical equipment for Wendelstein 7-X.
"This was a good opportunity for the University of Illinois", states the division head responsible at IPP, Professor Dr. Robert Wolf. "It was just at this time that the Center for Plasma Material Interactions (CPMI) were looking for a small plasma device." The transfer agreement was signed by IPP in mid-September 2014. Illinois are taking the responsibility and meeting the cost of dismantling WEGA, transporting it to the USA and re-assembling it at CPMI. Under its new name, HIDRA (Hybrid Illinois Device for Research and Applications), the device will continue to be used for plasma physics and fusion research. "We were very fortunate", says CPMI Director Professor David Ruzic, who sees numerous application possibilities for the device, including in particular investigation of the interaction between the plasma and wall material of the plasma vessel. The objective of fusion research is to develop a power plant that, like the sun, derives energy from fusion of atomic nuclei.
Transfer of WEGA is one of several constituents of American-German collaboration around Wendelstein 7-X. In 2011 the USA had already set up a three-year cooperation project with IPP whereby scientists from the fusion institutes at Princeton, Oak Ridge and Los Alamos contributed with equipment and studies valued at about ten million dollars for building Wendelstein 7-X. In return, the United States will become partner in the research programme of the German device, a collaboration for which a new 500,000 dollar programme was set up for US universities.
Little WEGA is likewise a member of the Wendelstein family at IPP. It can look back upon an eventful past: Under the name "Wendelstein Experiment in Grenoble for the Application of Radio Frequency Heating" it was commissioned in 1975 as a joint German-French-Belgian project. Scientists from IPP at Garching and Centre d´Etudes Nucléaires at Grenoble had jointly planned, built and operated WEGA. After a seventeen-year stopover at the University of Stuttgart the device started up again at IPP Greifswald in 2001.
WEGA provided much of the new personnel of the branch institute, established in 1994, with their first experience of a plasma experiment. New heating antennas, diagnostics and control equipment for big-brother Wendelstein 7-X were tested on the adaptable WEGA device. It was the subject of two bachelor, two master, 13 diploma and six PhD theses. "At the age of almost 40 years, WEGA is certainly one of the longest-living fusion experiments, if not the longest ever", says Professor Wolf, who together with the WEGA team is happy that the sturdy device still has a future. "In presumably three weeks it will start out on its hitherto longest journey – this time even across the Atlantic."
Source: phys.org
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Naukowcy i inżynierowie z ośmiu krajów, w tym z Polski, z powodzeniem zademonstrowali zastosowanie laserów na tokamaku Joint European Torus (JET), udowadniając, że jest to opłacalna technologia pomiaru retencji paliwa...
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Pracownik badawczo-techniczny mgr inż. Olgierd Cichorek z Laboratorium Plazmowych Napędów Satelitarnych w IFPiLM został nominowany do tytułu Osobowość Roku 2024 w kategorii Nauka. Kapituła Redakcji „Polskiej Metropolii Warszawskiej”, „Echa Dnia” i...
Czytaj więcej02-01-2025
Z przyjemnością informujemy, że Pani Minister Przemysłu Marzena Czarnecka z dniem 1 stycznia 2025 roku powołała dr hab. Monikę Kubkowską na stanowisko dyrektora Instytutu Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy im....
Czytaj więcej31-12-2024
Dr Christian Perez von Thun z Zakładu Badań Plazmy Termojądrowej w Instytucie Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy został członkiem grupy International Tokamak Physics Activity (ITPA) w obszarze Pedestal & Edge...
Czytaj więcej23-12-2024
Przemysław Tchórz z Zakładu Fizyki i Zastosowań Plazmy Laserowej w Instytucie Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy został mianowany w ramach konkursu co-Leaderem grupy roboczej WG2: Experiments: Proton boron and Towards...
Czytaj więcej20-12-2024
Instytut Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy (IFPiLM) od lat angażuje się w pomoc podopiecznym z Centrum Rehabilitacji, Edukacji i Opieki TPD „Helenów” w Warszawie. W 2024 roku wsparcie Instytutu miało...
Czytaj więcej25-11-2024
Dr hab. Agata Chomiczewska i dr inż. Natalia Wendler z Instytutu Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy (IFPiLM) wygłoszą wykład pt. „Synteza jądrowa – przełomowe wyniki badań, które mogą zmienić przyszłość...
Czytaj więcej24-10-2024
Zespół naukowców z Instytutu Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy (IFPiLM) przeprowadził znaczącą modernizację diagnostyki PHA (pulse-height analyzer), która jest obecnie aktywnie wykorzystywana na stellaratorze Wendelstein 7-X w ramach kampanii OP.2.2,...
Czytaj więcej22-10-2024
Ogłoszenie o postępowaniu konkursowym na stanowisko dyrektora w Instytucie Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy im. Sylwestra Kaliskiego Działając na podstawie art. 24 ust. 2 ustawy z dnia 30 kwietnia 2010 r....
Czytaj więcej21-10-2024
Zapraszamy na wykład dr Agnieszki Zaraś-Szydłowskiej z Zakładu Fizyki i Zastosowań Plazmy Laserowej. Temat wystąpienia: Od powstania lasera do fuzji jądrowej: technologia, zastosowania i najnowsze osiągnięcia w świecie laserów Spotkanie odbędzie się...
Czytaj więcej27-09-2024
Zapraszamy na wykład mgr. inż. Macieja Jakubczaka z Laboratorium Plazmowych Napędów Satelitarnych. Temat wystąpienia: Nadniebny rejs - historia i przyszłość plazmowych napędów kosmicznych. Spotkanie odbędzie się 3 października 2024 r. o godz....
Czytaj więcej25-09-2024
Przyszłe elektrownie termojądrowe mogą doświadczać mniejszych strat energii w spalanej plazmie niż dotychczas przewidywano. Autorzy badania - naukowcy z konsorcjum EUROfusion, w tym dr Michał Poradziński z Instytutu Fizyki Plazmy...
Czytaj więcej12-09-2024
Konsorcjum EUROfusion, wspierając postępy w badaniach nad energią z syntezy jądrowej, uruchomiło 15 nowych projektów badawczych, które angażują ekspertów z dziedziny data science z całej Europy. Projekty te wykorzystają największy...
Czytaj więcej21-06-2024
W ostatnim czasie dr hab. Agata Chomiczewska, prof. IFPiLM, oraz dr inż. Natalia Wendler wzięły udział w międzynarodowej konferencji Plasma Surface Interaction in Controlled Fusion Devices PSI-26 w Marsylii, podczas...
Czytaj więcej19-06-2024
W dniach 9-10 czerwca 2024 roku w Auli Wielkiej Politechniki Warszawskiej odbył się 2. Kongres "Nauka dla Społeczeństwa" pod hasłem "Tak nauka w Polsce wpływa na życie każdego człowieka". Instytut...
Czytaj więcej18-06-2024
Zakończyła się 17. edycja Letniej Szkoły Fizyki Plazmy Kudowa Summer School „Towards Fusion Energy”. W wydarzeniu zorganizowanym przez Instytut Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy (IFPiLM) w dniach 3-7 czerwca 2024...
Czytaj więcej17-06-2024
Dwa projekty zgłoszone przez pracowników IFPiLM, które znalazły się na rezerwowej liście w konkursach OPUS 25 i Preludium 22, otrzymały dofinansowanie. Sfinansowanie dodatkowych projektów badawczych w konkursach było możliwe dzięki zwiększeniu...
Czytaj więcej12-06-2024
Najbliższa edycja Pikniku Naukowego odbędzie się w sobotę, 15 czerwca 2024 roku, na PGE Narodowym w Warszawie. Temat przewodni wydarzenia: Nie do wiary! Na stoisku Instytutu Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy...
Czytaj więcej04-06-2024
W dniach 9-10 czerwca 2024 roku na terenie Politechniki Warszawskiej odbędzie się 2. Kongres „Nauka dla Społeczeństwa”. Honorowy patronat nad wydarzeniem objęli Minister Nauki i Urząd Patentowy RP. Kongres odbywa...
Czytaj więcej11-05-2024
Z wielkim smutkiem przyjęliśmy wiadomość o śmierci naszego przyjaciela dr. Hellmuta Schmidta (1935-2024). Nasz pierwszy kontakt z Hellmutem Schmidtem miał miejsce w okresie jego działalności w tzw. komitecie sterującym międzynarodowego centrum...
Czytaj więcej06-05-2024
Z okazji Dni Otwartych Funduszy Europejskich organizowanych w ramach obchodów 20-lecia Polski w Unii Europejskiej zapraszamy na wizytę w Instytucie Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy im. Sylwestra Kaliskiego. 10 maja o...
Czytaj więcej26-04-2024
Komisja Europejska uruchomiła konsultacje publiczne w sprawie: oceny okresowej programu Euratomu na lata 2021-2025 (interim evaluation of the Euratom Programme 2021-2025) oceny ex-ante przedłużenia programu (2026-2027) (ex-ante evaluation of the extension (2026-2027)...
Czytaj więcej22-04-2024
Zapraszamy na wykład dr inż. Natalii Wendler z IFPiLM w Narodowym Muzeum Techniki w Warszawie. Spotkanie odbędzie się 25 kwietnia 2024 r. o godz. 18.00. Tematem wystąpienia będą przełomowe wyniki badań...
Czytaj więcej11-04-2024
W związku z kolejną edycją BSBF – Big Science Business Forum (1 – 4 października 2024 r. Triest, Włochy) w Ambasadzie Włoskiej w Warszawie odbędzie się spotkanie "BIG SCIENCE BUSINESS FORUM 2024: TOWARDS A...
Czytaj więcej25-07-2025
In December 2022, the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (USA) marked a historic milestone in fusion science: an experiment produced 3.15 MJ of fusion energy from 2.05 MJ of laser...
Czytaj więcej04-06-2025
On May 22, 2025, the Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) stellarator at the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP) in Greifswald concluded its latest experimental campaign with a major success: a...
Czytaj więcej20-02-2025
On February 12, 2025, the WEST tokamak, located at CEA Cadarache in southern France, set a new world record by sustaining fusion plasma for 1,337 seconds, or over 22 minutes....
Czytaj więcej27-01-2025
20 stycznia Parlament Europejski zorganizował swoją pierwszą debatę na temat energii z syntezy jądrowej, zatytułowaną „Zasilanie przyszłości Europy – Rozwój przemysłu syntezy jądrowej na rzecz niezależności energetycznej i innowacji”. Podczas...
Czytaj więcej17-12-2024
At the 49th General Assembly held in Barcelona, December 2024, Dr. Gianfranco Federici was elected as the new Programme Manager of EUROfusion. He succeeds Prof. Ambrogio Fasoli, who will return...
Czytaj więcej16-12-2024
EUROfusion and Fusion for Energy (F4E) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to advance fusion research and development in Europe. This agreement reinforces cooperation in...
Czytaj więcej08-10-2024
John J. Hopfield and Geoffrey E. Hinton have been awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics "for foundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks." The Nobel...
Czytaj więcej10-09-2024
The Wendelstein 7-X, the world’s most advanced stellarator, is launching a new experimental campaign after a year of intensive maintenance and upgrades. This phase, known as OP2.2, begins on 10...
Czytaj więcej04-07-2024
On 3 July, ITER Director-General Pietro Barabaschi presented the new project baseline, under evaluation by the ITER Organization's governing body. This plan aims to ensure a robust start to scientific...
Czytaj więcej21-06-2024
The ITER Council convened this week for its 34th meeting, where nearly 100 attendees reviewed significant updates to the project baseline. The proposed changes aim to optimize the overall project...
Czytaj więcej04-04-2024
Dear fusion colleagues, As many of you will have heard by now, ITER will be hosting a first-ever workshop to engage with private sector fusion initiatives at the end of May,...
Czytaj więcej09-02-2024
On 8 February 2024, EUROfusion, in collaboration with the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA), proudly announced a new world record for the highest amount of fusion energy ever produced in...
Czytaj więcej01-02-2024
Are you a young professional contributing to the energy transition? The European Sustainable Energy Week (EUSEW) invites you to apply for its Young Energy Ambassadorship. EUSEW is committed to empowering the leaders of tomorrow,...
Czytaj więcej23-01-2024
The recruitment campaign for 2024-2026 Monaco-ITER Postdoctoral Fellowships has opened. We are looking for top candidates with an excellent track record of creativity and accomplishment. Research possibilities exist in many areas...
Czytaj więcej03-01-2024
For the preparation of the experimental programme of OP 2.2 and OP 2.3, we are pleased to invite you to submit experimental proposals. Submission of proposals will be possible in...
Czytaj więcej01-12-2023
The prospect of harnessing fusion energy is closer. The successful operation of JT-60SA, the most powerful experimental device to date, built by Europe and Japan, is a landmark achievement for...
Czytaj więcej26-10-2023
A momentous achievement in the field of nuclear fusion has been accomplished by a collaborative team of engineers from Europe and Japan. They have successfully generated tokamak plasma for the...
Czytaj więcej03-10-2023
Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L’Huillier are the winners of this year's Nobel Prize in Physics. It was awarded "for experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for...
Czytaj więcej08-08-2023
The US National Ignition Facility (NIF) has achieved fusion ignition once again, building on its landmark 2022 success. This achievement, powered by hydrogen within a diamond capsule, signifies a major...
Czytaj więcej20-07-2023
Professor Ambrogio Fasoli became the new EUROfusion Programme Manager Elect. The decision was made by EUROfusion General Assembly at the meeting on 18 July 2023. His tenure will officially commence...
Czytaj więcej07-06-2023
From a survey of 26 private fusion companies and 34 supplier companies, the Fusion Industry Association—a US-registered non-profit independent trade association for the acceleration of the arrival of fusion power—predicts a...
Czytaj więcej19-04-2023
EUROfusion has launched the call for applications for the 2024 EUROfusion Engineering Grants (EEGs). These grants will provide funding for up to twenty outstanding early-career engineers to conduct research projects starting in...
Czytaj więcej10-04-2023
The new JT-60SA International Fusion School (JIFS), jointly funded and organized by Japan's National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology (QST) and EUROfusion, aims to prepare the next generation of fusion physicists and engineers...
Czytaj więcej20-03-2023
The Xcitech course is an advanced course primarily aimed at young scientists and engineers at the graduate and post-graduate level who are currently working or interested in the area of fusion technology. It is...
Czytaj więcej17-03-2023
The Fusion Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) and the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) have worked with the fusion community to prepare a two-week program created to meet the needs of the emerging...
Czytaj więcej24-02-2023
Today, as we commemorate the anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, the EUROfusion consortium stands in solidarity with our Ukrainian member and research colleagues. EUROfusion remains committed to supporting...
Czytaj więcej23-02-2023
Another target has been achieved only recently by the W7-X researchers, namely they managed to acquire an energy turnover of 1.3 gigajoules in the device, which is 17 times higher...
Czytaj więcej04-10-2022
Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger are the winners of this year's Nobel Prize in Physics. It was awarded “for experiments with entangled photons, establishing the violation of...
Czytaj więcej27-09-2022
A new wave of fusion energy experiments on UK Atomic Energy Authority’s record-breaking Joint European Torus (JET) started this month. EUROfusion researchers are using the famous JET machine to conduct a...
Czytaj więcej21-09-2022
Pietro Barabaschi has become the next Director-General of the ITER Organization as a result of the unanimous choice of the Council from among finalist candidates. In the transition period Dr....
Czytaj więcej07-07-2022
At a livestreamed Horizon EUROfusion event in Brussels on 5 July 2022, EUROfusion celebrated the start of conceptual design activities for Europe's first demonstration fusion power plant DEMO. This first-of-a-kind...
Czytaj więcej17-05-2022
This month, we have witnessed the successful lifting and lowering into the machine well of the first sub-section of the ITER plasma chamber. The weight of the component is the...
Czytaj więcej15-02-2022
Obtaining a burning plasma is a critical step towards self-sustaining fusion energy. A burning plasma is one in which the fusion reactions themselves are the primary source of heating in...
Czytaj więcej20-01-2022
Iconic fusion energy machine JET – which reaches controlled temperatures 10 times hotter than the core of the sun – completed its 100,000th live pulse last night. Weighing 2,800 tonnes, the...
Czytaj więcej20-12-2021
15 December 2021 saw the EUROfusion consortium signing the Grant Agreement under Horizon Europe, the European Framework Programme from 2021 – 2027, in an aim to launch comprehensive R&D approach...
Czytaj więcej25-10-2021
The European research consortium EUROfusion presents a game-based exhibition blending art, science and technology to explore fusion energy and get visitors' input on how fusion could fit into society. Fusion, Power...
Czytaj więcej06-10-2021
Laureatami tegorocznej Nagrody Nobla z fizyki zostali Syukuro Manabe, Klaus Hasselmann i Giorgio Parisi. Nagrodę przyznano im „za przełomowy wkład w zrozumienie złożonych systemów fizycznych”. Manabe i Hasselmann zostali uhonorowani „za...
Czytaj więcej16-08-2021
On Aug. 8, 2021, an experiment at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s (LLNL’s) National Ignition Facility (NIF) made a significant step toward ignition, achieving a yield of more than 1.3 megajoules...
Czytaj więcej01-06-2021
It turned possible for the Chinese scientists from Hefei to achieve a plasma temperature of 120 million degrees Celsius for 101 seconds. Thus they set a new world record about...
Czytaj więcej31-05-2021
The exhaust system proved commercially effective for fusion power plants thanks to the UK Atomic Energy Authority’s new MAST Upgrade experiment at CCFE. Culham scientists performing testing applied the Super-X system...
Czytaj więcej02-04-2021
How to track impurities such as titanium, iron, nickel, copper or tungsten migrating throughout fusion plasmas? It is possible that tiny hand-made pellets manage to perform this task. The study...
Czytaj więcej29-03-2021
30 years ago, on 21 March 1991, the ASDEX Upgrade experimental device at Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP) in Germany generated its first plasma. The main aim of...
Czytaj więcej22-03-2021
The WEST experimental campaign which took place between the 27th of November and the 27th of January 2021 proved successful with testing of a significant number of ITER-like Plasma Facing...
Czytaj więcej03-03-2021
The scientific world can boast about efficient energizing of the toroidal field magnet, which made it possible to attain its full magnetic field. Plasma inside the vessel will be generated...
Czytaj więcej10-02-2021
The team of engineers from the Research Instruments (RI), Germany, has successfully completed the ITER Inner-Vertical Target (IVT) prototype’s engineering phase. The very complex component was produced no matter how...
Czytaj więcej07-01-2021
The recommendations of the DEMO expert panel will facilitate the implementation of the next step of the Roadmap aimed at the construction of the demonstration power plant. Review-based approach makes...
Czytaj więcej02-11-2020
We have recently seen the launch of the MAST Upgrade tokamak which produced the first plasma (the video is available on YouTube). This brings us closed to obtain safe low-carbon...
Czytaj więcej29-10-2020
Similarly to the cycle of nature, winter is coming also in the field of science. Namely, the cool down of the 140 tons superconducting Toroidal Field magnet has started under...
Czytaj więcej08-10-2020
A new Cooperation Agreement between the international ITER fusion project, the Italian Consorzio RFX and EUROfusion will allow European researchers from eight countries to join the Neutral Beam Test Facility...
Czytaj więcej10-08-2020
Ten years after the start of construction in August 2010, ITER marked a new chapter in its long history. This historic moment was witnesses by distinguished guests, including French President...
Czytaj więcej