Timeline of nuclear fusion
- 1929 - Atkinson and Houtermans
used the measured masses of light elements and applied Einstein's
discovery that E=mc2 to predict that large amounts of energy could
be released by fusing
small nuclei together.
- 1939 - Hans
Bethe won the Nobel
Prize in physics (awarded 1968) for quantitative theory explaining fusion
- shortly after World
War II and the success of the Manhattan
Project the hydrogen
bomb was built, which released large amounts of fusion energy from a reaction
ignited by a fission trigger
- 1947 First kiloAmp plasma
created by a team at the Imperial
College, London, in
a dough-nut shaped glass vacuum vessel. Plasmas are totally unstable and only
last fractions of seconds.
- 1951 - Argentina
publicly claimed that they had harnessed controlled nuclear fusion (these
claims were false), sparking a responsive research effort in the U.S.
- 1952 - Cousins and Ware
build a small toroidal pinch device in England,
and demonstrate that instabilities in the plasma make pinch devices inherently
unstable.
- 1952 - 1 Nov, Operation
Mike: The first detonation of a hydrogen
bomb, yield 10.4 megatons.
- 1953 - pinch devices in
the US and USSR attempt to take the reactions to fusion levels without worrying
about stability. Both report detections of neutrons,
which are later explained as non-fusion in nature.
- 1954 - ZETA stabilized toroidal
pinch device starts operation in England built at Harwell south of Oxford.
- 1958 - American, English
and Soviet scientists began to share previously classified fusion research,
as their countries declassified controlled fusion work as part of the Atoms
for Peace conference in Geneva (an amazing development considering the Cold
War political climate of the time)
- 1958 - ZETA experiments
end. Several firings produce neutron spikes that the researchers initially
attribute to fusion, but later realize are due to other effects. Last few
firings show an odd "quiet period" of long stability in a system that otherwise
appeared to prove itself unstable. Research on pinch machines generally dies
off as ZETA appears to be the best that can be done.
- 1967 - Demonstration of
Farnsworth-Hirsch
Fusor appears to generate neutrons in a nuclear reaction.
- 1968 - Results from the
T-3 Soviet magnetic confinment device, called a tokamak,
which Igor Yevgenyevich
Tamm and Andrei
Sakharov had been working on - showed the temperatures in their machine
to be over an order of magnitude higher than what was expected by the rest
of the community. The Western scientists visited the experiment and verified
the high temperatures and confinement, sparking a wave of optimism for the
prospects of the tokamak, which is still the dominant magnetic confinement
device today, as well as construction of new experiments.
- 1974 - Taylor re-visits
ZETA results of 1958 and explains that the quiet-period is in fact very interesting.
This leads to the development of "reversed field pinch", now generalized as
"self-organizing plasmas", an ongoing line of research.
- 1976 - Design work on JET,
the Joint European Torus, begins.
- 1978 - The JET
project is given the go-ahead by then EC. The chosen site is an ex-RAF
airfield south east of Oxford,
UK.
- 1983 - JET
is completed on time and on budget. First plasmas achieved.
- 1988 - The Japanese tokamak,
JT-60 came online
- March 1989 - two Utah physicists,
Pons and Fleischmann, announced that they achieved cold
fusion - causing fusion to occur at room temperatures. However, they made
their announcements before any peer review of their work was performed, and
no subsequent experiments by other researchers revealed any evidence of fusion.
- 1993 - The TFTR tokamak
at Princeton (PPPL) does experiments with 50% deuterium,
50% tritium, which eventually
produces as much as 10 megawatts of power from a controlled fusion reaction.
- 1997 - The JET
tokamak in the UK produces 16 MW of fusion power - the current world record
of fusion power. Four megawatts of alpha-particle self-heating was achieved.
- 1997 - combining a field-reversed pinch with an imploding magnetic cylinder
results in the new Magnetized Target Fusion concept in the US
(which has not been participating in interanational Tokamak research). In
this system a "normal" lower density plasma device is explosively squeezed
using techniques developed for high-speed gun research.
- 2002 - Claims and counter-claims
are published regarding bubble
fusion, in which a table-top apparatus is reported as producing small-scale
fusion in a liquid undergoing acoustic cavitation. Like cold fusion, it's
later dismissed.
The
USA joins
the
ITER project, the successor
to
JET
- 2003 - Cadarache in France selected as the European Candidate Site for ITER
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