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7/26/2025, 6:06:24 PM
>>511426966
Lol this is bullshit.
From the same website is picrel.
22 Minutes is obviously longer than 1066 seconds.
Germany has the current record and is closest to actual usability i believe. They produced a new record, which was in the news 8 days ago:
> https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/energy/a65432654/wendelstein-7x-germany-stellarator-fusion-record/
Because hat matters is not duration, but “triple product performance":
>In a recent experiment, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics sustained a stable plasma reaction in the Wendelstein 7-X for 43 seconds, reaching the “triple product” performance level that’s required for viable nuclear fusion and achieving the all-time best results for any stellarator.
>Maybe 43 seconds doesn’t sound like much, but it’s now the longest plasma duration ever in nuclear fusion, including tokamaks. Previously, the now-defunct JT60U Tokamak in Japan and the JET European Tokamak in the U.K—which boasted triple the plasma volume—held the records for plasma duration.
>The triple product measures how close a fusion reactor is to reaching self-sustaining ‘breakeven’ energy production levels—the point at which a reactor produces more energy than it consumes. The three factors that go into the triple product are the density of ionized particles flowing through hot plasma, the temperature of ions being fused, and energy confinement time (how long it takes for heat to escape plasma that’s not heated again). Longer confinement times mean better insulation.
I assume china put this out to steel attention from Germany.
Lol this is bullshit.
From the same website is picrel.
22 Minutes is obviously longer than 1066 seconds.
Germany has the current record and is closest to actual usability i believe. They produced a new record, which was in the news 8 days ago:
> https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/energy/a65432654/wendelstein-7x-germany-stellarator-fusion-record/
Because hat matters is not duration, but “triple product performance":
>In a recent experiment, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics sustained a stable plasma reaction in the Wendelstein 7-X for 43 seconds, reaching the “triple product” performance level that’s required for viable nuclear fusion and achieving the all-time best results for any stellarator.
>Maybe 43 seconds doesn’t sound like much, but it’s now the longest plasma duration ever in nuclear fusion, including tokamaks. Previously, the now-defunct JT60U Tokamak in Japan and the JET European Tokamak in the U.K—which boasted triple the plasma volume—held the records for plasma duration.
>The triple product measures how close a fusion reactor is to reaching self-sustaining ‘breakeven’ energy production levels—the point at which a reactor produces more energy than it consumes. The three factors that go into the triple product are the density of ionized particles flowing through hot plasma, the temperature of ions being fused, and energy confinement time (how long it takes for heat to escape plasma that’s not heated again). Longer confinement times mean better insulation.
I assume china put this out to steel attention from Germany.
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