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[🇮🇳] 20X Hotter': How India Quietly Built A Sun In The Shadow of China's Record Plasma Fea

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[🇮🇳] 20X Hotter': How India Quietly Built A Sun In The Shadow of China's Record Plasma Fea
More threads by Krishna with Flute

Short Summary: Hotter than the hotest, Grand Pa of all nuclear fusion reactors, India's recent advancements in nuclear fusion technology have positioned it as a significant player in the global race for sustainable energy. The SST-1 Tokamak, operational since 2013, has achieved plasma temperatures 20 times hotter than the Sun, marking a notable milestone in fusion research. This achievement comes as China continues to make headlines with its EAST reactor, which recently sustained plasma for 1,000 seconds, setting a new world record.
Jan 26, 2024
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20X Hotter': How India Quietly Built A Sun In The Shadow of China's Record Plasma Fea​


India_Steady_State_Superconducting_Tokamak_Fusion_Reactor.jpg

India's Steady State Superconducting Tokamak Nuclear Fusion Reactor

India's recent advancements in nuclear fusion technology have positioned it as a significant player in the global race for sustainable energy. The SST-1 Tokamak, operational since 2013, has achieved plasma temperatures 20 times hotter than the Sun, marking a notable milestone in fusion research. This achievement comes as China continues to make headlines with its EAST reactor, which recently sustained plasma for 1,000 seconds, setting a new world record.

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'20X Hotter': How India Quietly Built A Sun In The Shadow of China's Record Plasma Feat
Friday, January 31, 2025 by Indian Defence News

India_Steady_State_Superconducting_Tokamak_Fusion_Reactor.jpg

India's Steady State Superconducting Tokamak Nuclear Fusion Reactor

India's recent advancements in nuclear fusion technology have positioned it as a significant player in the global race for sustainable energy. The SST-1 Tokamak, operational since 2013, has achieved plasma temperatures 20 times hotter than the Sun, marking a notable milestone in fusion research. This achievement comes as China continues to make headlines with its EAST reactor, which recently sustained plasma for 1,000 seconds, setting a new world record.

India's Steady State Superconducting Tokamak-1 Tokamak

Achieved plasma temperatures around 200 million degrees Celsius.

India’s SST-1, operational since 2013, is its answer to cutting-edge fusion technology. It creates temperatures 20 times hotter than the Sun’s core, marking India as one of six nations with a superconducting Tokamak.

India is set to advance its nuclear fusion capabilities with the development of the Steady-State Superconducting Tokamak-2 (SST-2), a next-generation fusion reactor. Construction is expected to commence in 2027, marking a significant step in India's ambition to lead in sustainable energy solutions.

India is making significant strides in nuclear fusion research, particularly with its Steady State Superconducting Tokamak (SST-1) project. Recently, SST-1 achieved a remarkable milestone by generating plasma at temperatures 20 times hotter than the Sun's core. This achievement positions India competitively alongside China's Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST), which has also been advancing in fusion technology.

India is planning to develop SST-2, a next-generation fusion reactor that will incorporate advanced features such as biological shielding and improved plasma control systems. Construction for SST-2 is expected to begin in 2027, marking another step towards India's ambition to be a leader in sustainable energy through nuclear fusion.

China's EAST Reactor:

China's Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST), also known as the "artificial sun," has achieved a ground breaking milestone in nuclear fusion research. On January 20, 2025, EAST sustained plasma for an impressive 1,066 seconds, shattering the previous record of 403 seconds set in 2023.

The EAST reactor operates at temperatures exceeding 100 million degrees Celsius, which is critical for achieving stable fusion reactions.

Comparative Insights
[th]
Feature​
[/th][th]
India (SST-1)​
[/th][th]
China (EAST)​
[/th]​
[td]
Plasma Temperature​
[/td][td]
200 million degrees Celsius​
[/td][td]
100 million degrees Celsius​
[/td]​
[td]
Sustained Plasma Duration​
[/td][td]
Not specified​
[/td][td]
1,000 seconds​
[/td]​
[td]
Operational Since​
[/td][td]
2013​
[/td][td]
2006​
[/td]​
[td]
Global Standing​
[/td][td]
One of six superconducting Tokamaks​
[/td][td]
Leading in sustained plasma duration​
[/td]​

Implications For Fusion Research

The advancements made by India and China highlight the competitive nature of nuclear fusion research. While India's SST-1 demonstrates significant temperature capabilities, China's EAST focuses on sustaining plasma for longer periods. Both nations are part of the larger ITER collaboration, which aims to develop fusion as a viable energy source.

Fusion technology is seen as a potential solution to global energy challenges due to its ability to produce clean energy without greenhouse gas emissions. The ongoing developments in both countries suggest that they are not only competing but also contributing to the global knowledge pool necessary for achieving practical fusion energy solutions.

India's achievement of creating plasma significantly hotter than that of the Sun underscores its growing role in the field of nuclear fusion. As both India and China continue to make strides, the future of fusion energy looks promising, with potential implications for energy security and environmental sustainability on a global scale.

 
Tokamaks are mini research reactors. Several large universities in the US (I'd say a few dozen) have them.

How many research Universities in US have that? Pleasee give some names.
Secondly, it is not about having reactor. It is about achieving the fusion condition which some of the countries in the world are trying to achieve for many decades.
 
How many research Universities in US have that? Pleasee give some names. Secondly, it is not about having reactor. It is about achieving the fusion condition which some of the countries in the world are trying to achieve for many decades.
Bhai - Universities in the US have been fiddling with Tokamaks since the 1970's. My dad used one as a research assignment too at UCLA. The high point in US academic circles was the 1980's when most larger US Engineering program universities (MIT, UCLA, USC, UT, A&M, UCBerkeley) all had them, and second tier universities too. They are all shut down now, concept being proven and too expensive to operate just for research purposes for electrical engg. students.

Now Indians have one Tokamak operating and one planned. Suddenly India is the global trailblazer in Tokamak technology after 50 some years...

 
Bhai - Universities in the US have been fiddling with Tokamaks since the 1970's. My dad used one as a research assignment too at UCLA. The high point in US academic circles was the 1980's when most larger US Engineering program universities (MIT, UCLA, USC, UT, A&M, UCBerkeley) all had them, and second tier universities too. They are all shut down now, concept being proven and too expensive to operate just for research purposes for electrical engg. students.

Now Indians have one Tokamak operating and one planned. Suddenly India is the global trailblazer in Tokamak technology after 50 some years...


2 as per the list provided by you. Aditya and SST 1.
 
If you quote me have some value in input

Just curious. Is little Israel worth any 'value'?

Isn't you little Israel just fond of licking

Just curious. Is little Israel worth any 'value'?

Isn't you little Israel just fond of licking India's butt?🤣





Thread 'Forbe kicks India out of top 10 most Powerful nations. Israel ranks 10th'
https://pkdefense.com/threads/forbe...most-powerful-nations-israel-ranks-10th.2446/
 

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