The two leading concepts for confining high-temperature fusion plasmas are the tokamak and the stellarator. Tokamaks are rotationally symmetric and use a large plasma current to achieve confinement, whereas stellarators are non-axisymmetric and employ three-dimensionally shaped magnetic field coils to twist the field and confine the plasma. As a result, the magnetic field of a stellarator needs to be carefully designed to minimize the collisional transport arising from poorly confined particle orbits, which would otherwise cause excessive power losses at high plasma temperatures. In addition, this type of transport leads to the appearance of a net toroidal plasma current, the so-called bootstrap current. Here, we analyse results from the f...
The two leading concepts for confining high-temperature fusion plasmas are the tokamak and the stell...
Fusion energy research has in the past 40 years focused primarily on the tokamak concept, but recent...
Research on magnetic confinement of high-temperature plasmas has the ultimate goal of harnessing nuc...
The two leading concepts for confining high-temperature fusion plasmas are the tokamak and the stell...
The two leading concepts for confining high-temperature fusion plasmas are the tokamak and the stell...
Fusion energy research has in the past 40 years focused primarily on the tokamak concept, but recent...
Research on magnetic confinement of high-temperature plasmas has the ultimate goal of harnessing nuc...
The two leading concepts for confining high-temperature fusion plasmas are the tokamak and the stell...
The two leading concepts for confining high-temperature fusion plasmas are the tokamak and the stell...
Fusion energy research has in the past 40 years focused primarily on the tokamak concept, but recent...
Research on magnetic confinement of high-temperature plasmas has the ultimate goal of harnessing nuc...