Whenever the topic of fusion power comes up, someone will say it’s only 10 years away from commercialization in an excited tone, and someone older or more cynical will point out that ...
China is leading the pack when it comes to developing nuclear power, and its 'artificial sun' is set to pave the way for many ...
France’s WEST tokamak held a fusion plasma at roughly 50 million degrees Celsius for 1,337 seconds, more than 22 minutes, ...
The Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research device, better known as KSTAR, sustained plasma at about 180 million ...
ITER’s new Magnet Cold Test Facility has successfully reached 4 Kelvin, marking a crucial step in testing superconducting coils.
The world’s largest tokamak restarts with giant coils to control plasma, bringing fusion energy a step closer to reality.
In the concrete pit of the world’s largest fusion experiment, a magnet taller than a four-story building now stands fully ...
South Korea’s KSTAR reactor just held 100-million-degree plasma for 102 seconds. See how fusion is closing the gap on clean ...
Europe and Japan have restarted integrated commissioning on JT-60SA, the world’s largest operating tokamak, as they prepare for a new round of plasma experiments expected to begin at the end of 2026 ...
Take a look inside ITER, the world's largest fusion energy project, to see how scientists from around the world are working ...
ITER, a €22-billion project in France, progresses as it receives final components for its central solenoid magnet, aiming to replicate the Sun's energy for limitless clean power.
France endured for 22 minutes, and China surpassed 1,000 seconds. Now, South Korea is also setting out to establish a national strategy aimed at enter ...