FrontLine

One step closer to nuclear fusion, the Holy Grail of physics

- Compiled by R. Ramachandr­an

THE NIF

IN August 2021, a nuclear fusion reaction triggered at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) in California, US, generated more energy than the energy that directly went into heating the target capsule where the reaction took place. Now, a year later, the team has confirmed that the reaction met another important milestone: ignition.

Ignition in fusion is defined by what is called the Lawson criterion, which is a figure of merit that compares the rate of energy generated by fusion reactions in the fusion fuel to the rate of energy losses to the environmen­t. When the rate of production is higher than the rate of loss, the system will produce net energy.

If enough of that energy is captured by the fuel to trigger fusion reactions within it, the system will become self-sustaining and is said to be ignited. This is exactly what happens when paper, wood, or

coal is burnt: the heat from the burning part increases the temperatur­e locally and sets fire to the adjacent, previously cold, fuel.

The NIF uses the largest laser in the world to heat and compress a small capsule containing hydrogen fuel and thereby induce nuclear fusion reactions in the fuel.

The researcher­s confirmed that the reaction achieved ignition according to nine different forms of the Lawson criterion.

This makes the August 2021fusion reaction the first laboratory fusion experiment to achieve ignition, bringing researcher­s another step closer to the Holy Grail of physics: nuclear fusion reactions that produce more energy than they consume. The achievemen­t will have implicatio­ns for nuclear fusion as a source of energy.

The results were published in the August 8 issue of Physical Review Letters

and Physical Review E.

 ?? ?? uses the largest laser in the world to heat and compress a small capsule containing hydrogen fuel and thereby induce nuclear fusion reactions in the fuel. Here, an artist’s rendering of the laser beams entering the capsule through openings on either end.
uses the largest laser in the world to heat and compress a small capsule containing hydrogen fuel and thereby induce nuclear fusion reactions in the fuel. Here, an artist’s rendering of the laser beams entering the capsule through openings on either end.

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