Nuclear fusion reactor in South Korea runs at 100 million degrees C for a record-breaking 48 seconds
Nuclear fusion reactor in South Korea runs at 100 million degrees C for a record-breaking 48 seconds
The experimental fusion reactor sustained temperatures of 212 million degrees Fahrenheit for a record-breaking 48 seconds.
48 seconds. I predict a glut of helium. balloons for everyone
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Unfortunately the amount of helium made in fusion is so small as to be useless for anything humans need. Fusion is just that efficient.
16 0 ReplySo no chipmunk voices? 😢
8 2 ReplyOnly for chipmunks for now.
10 1 ReplyWe actually get all of our helium from mining, trapped gas. And we're running out of the easy to reach stuff. So yes, no more chipmunk voices.
But they're similar gasses that can do the same thing and even ones that make your voice deeper.
2 0 ReplyYes! I’ve heard. I would love to try some of that.
1 0 ReplyAlways careful with gasses. You basically replace a certain amount of capacity in your lungs with them, so you can very much suffocate yourself if you overdo it.
1 0 Reply
They use orders of magnitude more liquid helium to cool the magnets used to stabalize fusion than they would ever make.
4 0 Reply