Burning plasma fusion reactions, thought to be crucial for building working fusion reactors, are producing more high-energy particles than researchers expected. Solving the mystery of why could be key to making fusion viable.
When a highly compressed and hot gas called a plasma begins to heat itself up from internal reactions, it is said to be a burning plasma, a state of matter only recently created at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s National Ignition Facility (NIF) in California. We expect the charged particles, or ions,…