this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2024
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The article doesn't say what the Q value is. I'm assuming it's below 1.
I'd imagine, but I found this interesting:
Had no idea someone had managed to get more energy out of a fusion device than they put in. Must have been unable to sustain it for any significant length of time, but still seems important.
The Q=1.53 was done at the National Ignition Facility using inertial confinement fusion, which is significant for plasma research (and probably bombs), but can't be used to generate power.
It was big news I want to say about a year ago when a team first published that they had done it
Also this is just plasma gain, not whole system gain. To have a commercially viable reactor your probably need Q total > 10 at least. No system build so far even has a Q total of 1
It was the NIF two years ago but it's also not going to be generating power ever, it was just a demonstration/proof of concept.
By 2027 the goal is Q>10
Yes, and cold fusion is 10 years away. They are not going to manage that in 5 years.
If estimates on fusion were reliable we would have had cold fusion in 1970. They can move faster but there are so many unknown unknowns.
I hope they can do it, but I will eat a shoe and post it to this website if they hit Q>10 by 2027