ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) is the world's largest
experimental nuclear fusion reactor in southern France which aims to deliver nuclear fusion on a commercial scale, offering safe, limitless and environmentally responsible energy.
German engineers from the Max Planck Institute successfully activated
the experimental nuclear fusion reactor used in the research last December and successfully managed to suspend plasma for the first time.
Located in the south of France, ITER is currently building the world's most advanced
experimental nuclear fusion reactor.
As the international ITER project to develop
an experimental nuclear fusion reactor eats into research budgets around the world, an advisory panel to the US Department of Energy recommends mothballing at least one of three major experiments and focusing on research necessary to bring ITER online.
Researchers from the US and China have made progress in their joint collaboration on the use of lithium to control plasma within
experimental nuclear fusion reactors.
Not exact matches
Even though a supporter of
nuclear power, Charpak was one of three signatories to an editorial in the French daily Libération in August that called for a halt to the building of the
experimental fusion reactor ITER in the south of France because the cost of the project has running out of control and the plant will be «unusable.»