Nuclear fusion

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Nuclear fusion in videographics VIDEOGRAPHIC
Transcript
00:00 [Music plays]
00:09 Presented as an abundant source of energy
00:11 which is safe and does not produce greenhouse gas emissions,
00:15 proponents for nuclear fusion say it could liberate the world
00:18 from its dependence on fossil fuels.
00:20 [Music plays]
00:22 Currently nuclear power stations use the process of nuclear fission
00:26 where the nucleus of an atom is split apart releasing energy.
00:29 Fusion is the reverse process.
00:32 In an extremely hot environment around 150 million degrees Celsius
00:37 two light atoms such as hydrogen are fused to form a heavier one
00:41 such as helium which releases energy.
00:44 This process occurs in the stars such as our sun.
00:47 There are two ways to create this fusion process.
00:51 One is magnetic confinement.
00:54 In an immense reactor light atoms deuterium and tritium are heated.
00:58 The material becomes a plasma, an extremely hot gas with low density
01:03 which is contained using a magnetic field produced by massive magnets.
01:08 This method is used by the International ITER Project in France
01:13 and the JET Project in Britain.
01:15 The second method is inertial confinement
01:19 where hydrogen atoms contained in a thimble-sized capsule
01:23 are bombarded by high-energy lasers.
01:27 [Music plays]
01:30 X-rays are created which heat the interior of the capsule.
01:33 It implodes and fusion reactions are created.
01:37 This technique is used by the US NIF Laboratory.
01:41 During a recent historic experiment the laboratory in California
01:44 created a fusion reaction which produced slightly more energy
01:48 than required to initiate the process with lasers
01:51 a stage known as the ignition platform.
01:55 However this is the first step in a process which would require
01:58 decades of further research to reach an industrial and commercial stage.
02:03 [Music plays]
02:05 [Silence]

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