HOTTING UP

Inside ‘holy grail’ fusion experiments to create a mini Sun after biggest-ever breakthrough in race for UNLIMITED energy

THE "Holy Grail" of virtually limitless clean energy from nuclear fusion reactors is within reach after a series of major breakthroughs, scientists believe.

Boffins based in the US this week announced they had made groundbreaking headway in the international pursuit to create a mini Sun.

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The US team based in California were able to achieve a landmark net energy gain in their December experimentCredit: Reuters
The hydrogen capsule was blasted by 192 high-powered laser beams to mimick the conditions of the centre of the Sun
The JET nuclear fusion reactor near Oxford produced enough energy to power 10,000 homes
Boffins recreated the spark at the sun's core by heating hydrogen to 150million degrees inside a magnetic coil
South Korea's KSTAR sustained a 100m degree fusion reactor for 30 secondsCredit: New Scientist

Physicists have finally been able to achieve a net energy gain when carrying out a nuclear fusion experiment.

Researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California revealed they were one step closer to their goal following a landmark study in early December.

Scientists explained they managed to "produce more energy from fusion than the laser energy used to drive it" - proving their plans could work on a global scale in the future.

The team put a minuscule amount of hydrogen into a capsule the size of a peppercorn, before firing 192 high-powered laser beams at it.

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The powerful laser manages to mimick the conditions of the centre of the Sun, by sending the temperature soaring to more than three million degrees centigrade.

These forces cause the capsule to implode - seeing the hydrogen atoms fuse and incredibly release energy in the process.

The US team used 2.1 megajoules of energy to create the conditions for the reaction, and gained 2.5 megajoules return – an achievement known as fusion ignition.

The success of the £2.85bn experiment has been credited to "60 years of global research, development, engineering, and experimentation."

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Although experts are still years off the tech being used to power homes, the world is now one step closer to an energy revolution.

Researchers in the US had attempted the experiment "hundreds of times before" but had never gained more energy than was consumed.

Dr. Kim Budil, the director of the LLNL, described it as "one of the most significant scientific challenges ever tackled by humanity". 

And US energy secretary Jennifer Granholm echoed her comments, saying the study "will go down in the history books".

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Jeremy Chittenden, professor of plasma physics and co-director of the Centre for Inertial Fusion Studies at Imperial College London dubbed it "a true breakthrough moment".

He added: "It proves that the long sought-after goal, the holy grail of fusion, can indeed be achieved."

President Joe Biden has already pinned his hopes on a commercial fusion reactor being in place within 10 years.

Nuclear fusion is the process that powers the Sun and other stars. 

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