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This German Machine in the Shape of a Twisted Pretzel Has Just Held a Plasma 48 Minutes: Physicists Don't Come Back, and It Changes Everything for Tomorrow's Energy
The search for clean and almost unlimited energy is progressing rapidly with the latest successes of the Wendelstein 7‐X, an experimental reactor based in Greifswald, Germany. Located at the Max Planck Institute of Plasma Physics (IPP), it is now one of the most prominent projects in the complex and promising field of nuclear fusion. These advances attract attention worldwide, especially in the face of the acute climate crisis. Why fusion makes …
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The search for clean and almost unlimited energy is progressing rapidly with the latest successes of the Wendelstein 7‐X, an experimental reactor based in Greifswald, Germany. Located at the Max Planck Institute of Plasma Physics (IPP), it is now one of the most prominent projects in the complex and promising field of nuclear fusion. These advances attract attention worldwide, especially in the face of the acute climate crisis. Why fusion makes …