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Book Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee  Fusion Development Path Panel

Download or read book Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Fusion Development Path Panel written by United States. Department of Energy. Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee and published by . This book was released on 2003 with total page 82 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book A Plan for the Development of Fusion Energy  Final Report to Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee  Fusion Development Path Panel

Download or read book A Plan for the Development of Fusion Energy Final Report to Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Fusion Development Path Panel written by and published by . This book was released on 2003 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This report presents a plan for the deployment of a fusion demonstration power plant within 35 years, leading to commercial application of fusion energy by mid-century. The plan is derived from the necessary features of a demonstration fusion power plant and from the time scale defined by President Bush. It identifies critical milestones, key decision points, needed major facilities and required budgets.

Book Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee  Burning Plasma Strategy Panel

Download or read book Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Burning Plasma Strategy Panel written by United States. Department of Energy. Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee. Panel on a Burning Plasma Program Strategy to Advance Fusion Energy and published by . This book was released on 2002 with total page 49 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Nuclear Fusion Energy Encyclopedia   Volume 2  ITER Project  Burning Plasma  American and International Fusion Research Facilities  Spinoffs  FESAC Reports  Toroidal Magnetic Fusion

Download or read book Nuclear Fusion Energy Encyclopedia Volume 2 ITER Project Burning Plasma American and International Fusion Research Facilities Spinoffs FESAC Reports Toroidal Magnetic Fusion written by Department of Energy (DOE) and published by . This book was released on 2017-06-03 with total page 586 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This unique compilation of official information provides an incredibly comprehensive overview of all aspects of the worlds' quest for nuclear fusion energy, including the ambitious ITER experimental burning plasma project, U.S. fusion research and facilities, international efforts in China, Russia, South Korea, and other countries, and plans for the DEMO reactor and full-scale electrical generation plants. Because of the enormous size of this material, for reproduction in paperback format it has been divided into two parts.VOLUME 1 - Part 1: DOE Fusion Energy Sciences * Part 2: ITER Project Overview and U.S. Contribution * Part 3: The Next Generation of Fusion Energy Research (Hearing) * Part 4: Fusion Energy (GAO) * Part 5: Fusion Spinoffs: Making A Difference Today * Part 6: Report of the FESAC Subcommittee on the Priorities of the Magnetic Fusion Energy Science Program 2013 * Part 7: Report of the FESAC Subcommittee on the Prioritization of Proposed Scientific User Facilities for the Office of Science 2013 * Part 8: Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Report on Opportunities for and Modes of International Collaboration in Fusion Energy Sciences Research during the ITER Era - February 2012 * Part 9: Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Report on Opportunities for Fusion Materials Science and Technology Research Now and During the ITER Era February 2012 * Part 10: Report of the Burning Plasma Organization Panel on Planning for US Participation in ITER - September 3, 2009 * Part 11: Priorities, Gaps and Opportunities: Towards A Long-Range Strategic Plan For Magnetic Fusion Energy - A Report to the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee - October 2007VOLUME 2 - Part 11: Priorities, Gaps and Opportunities: Towards A Long-Range Strategic Plan For Magnetic Fusion Energy - A Report to the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee - October 2007 (conclusion) * Part 12: Report of the 2005 FESAC Facilities Panel - Characteristics and Contributions of the Three Major United States Toroidal Magnetic Fusion Facilities * Part 13: FESAC A Plan for the Development of Fusion Energy * Part 14: Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Burning Plasma Strategy Panel - A Burning Plasma Program Strategy To Advance Fusion Energy * Part 15: NSTX-U FY2013 Year End Report * Part 16: Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee (FESAC) Meeting Minutes * Part 17: 2014 Fusion Energy Sciences Congressional Budget Request * Part 18: 2013 Fusion Energy Sciences Congressional Budget Request * Part 19: ITER Presentations

Book Nuclear Fusion Energy Encyclopedia   Volume 1  ITER Project  Burning Plasma  American and International Fusion Research Facilities  Spinoffs  FESAC Reports  Toroidal Magnetic Fusion

Download or read book Nuclear Fusion Energy Encyclopedia Volume 1 ITER Project Burning Plasma American and International Fusion Research Facilities Spinoffs FESAC Reports Toroidal Magnetic Fusion written by Department of Energy (DOE) and published by . This book was released on 2017-06-03 with total page 614 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This unique compilation of official information provides an incredibly comprehensive overview of all aspects of the worlds' quest for nuclear fusion energy, including the ambitious ITER experimental burning plasma project, U.S. fusion research and facilities, international efforts in China, Russia, South Korea, and other countries, and plans for the DEMO reactor and full-scale electrical generation plants. Because of the enormous size of this material, for reproduction in paperback format it has been divided into two parts.VOLUME 1 - Part 1: DOE Fusion Energy Sciences * Part 2: ITER Project Overview and U.S. Contribution * Part 3: The Next Generation of Fusion Energy Research (Hearing) * Part 4: Fusion Energy (GAO) * Part 5: Fusion Spinoffs: Making A Difference Today * Part 6: Report of the FESAC Subcommittee on the Priorities of the Magnetic Fusion Energy Science Program 2013 * Part 7: Report of the FESAC Subcommittee on the Prioritization of Proposed Scientific User Facilities for the Office of Science 2013 * Part 8: Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Report on Opportunities for and Modes of International Collaboration in Fusion Energy Sciences Research during the ITER Era - February 2012 * Part 9: Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Report on Opportunities for Fusion Materials Science and Technology Research Now and During the ITER Era February 2012 * Part 10: Report of the Burning Plasma Organization Panel on Planning for US Participation in ITER - September 3, 2009 * Part 11: Priorities, Gaps and Opportunities: Towards A Long-Range Strategic Plan For Magnetic Fusion Energy - A Report to the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee - October 2007VOLUME 2 - Part 11: Priorities, Gaps and Opportunities: Towards A Long-Range Strategic Plan For Magnetic Fusion Energy - A Report to the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee - October 2007 (conclusion) * Part 12: Report of the 2005 FESAC Facilities Panel - Characteristics and Contributions of the Three Major United States Toroidal Magnetic Fusion Facilities * Part 13: FESAC A Plan for the Development of Fusion Energy * Part 14: Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Burning Plasma Strategy Panel - A Burning Plasma Program Strategy To Advance Fusion Energy * Part 15: NSTX-U FY2013 Year End Report * Part 16: Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee (FESAC) Meeting Minutes * Part 17: 2014 Fusion Energy Sciences Congressional Budget Request * Part 18: 2013 Fusion Energy Sciences Congressional Budget Request * Part 19: ITER Presentations Fusion is a key element in long-term US energy plans. ITER will allow scientists to explore the physics of a burning plasma at energy densities close to that of a commercial power plant. This is a critical step towards producing and delivering electricity from fusion to the grid. Nuclear fusion occurs naturally in stars, like our sun. When hydrogen gets hot enough, the process of fusion occurs, releasing energy. On earth, producing fusion reactions by heating, compressing and confining hydrogen plasmas at 100 million degrees is a significant challenge. After years of research, scientists have learned that it is possible to create a self-heated fusion plasma and truly "bring a star to earth." Fusion has the potential to bring clean, abundant, safe energy to most of the world's populations. The fusion process produces no greenhouse gas emissions and generates no high-level radioactive waste. It is fueled by readily available resources: Deuterium (heavy hydrogen) is plentiful in water and tritium can be produced during the fusion process. Fusion could become a major contributor to the power grid for centuries to come.

Book Magnetic Fusion Energy Research and Development

Download or read book Magnetic Fusion Energy Research and Development written by United States. Energy Research Advisory Board. Technical Panel on Magnetic Fusion and published by . This book was released on 1984 with total page 84 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee  Panel on Integrated Simulation and Optimization of Magnetic Fusion Systems

Download or read book Report of the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Panel on Integrated Simulation and Optimization of Magnetic Fusion Systems written by and published by . This book was released on 2002 with total page 104 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Fusion is potentially an inexhaustible energy source whose exploitation re q u i res a basic understanding of high-temperature plasmas. The development of a science-based predictive capability for fusion-relevant plasmas is a challenge central to fusion energy science, in which numerical modeling has played a vital role for more than four decades. A combination of the very wide range in temporal and spatial scales, extreme anisotropy, the importance of geometric detail, and the requirement of causality which makes it impossible to parallelize over time, makes this problem one of the most challenging in computational physics. Sophisticated computational models are under development for many individual features of magnetically confined plasmas and increases in the scope and reliability of feasible simulations have been enabled by increased scientific understanding and improvements in computer technology. However, full predictive modeling of fusion plasmas will require qualitative improvements and innovations to enable cross coupling of a wider variety of physical processes and to allow solution over a larger range of space and time scales. The exponential growth of computer speed, coupled with the high cost of large-scale experimental facilities, makes an integrated fusion simulation initiative a timely and cost-effective opportunity. Worldwide progress in laboratory fusion experiments provides the basis for a recent FESAC recommendation to proceed with a burning plasma experiment (see FESAC Review of Burning Plasma Physics Report, September 2001). Such an experiment, at the frontier of the physics of complex systems, would be a huge step in establishing the potential of magnetic fusion energy to contribute to the world's energy security. An integrated simulation capability would dramatically enhance the utilization of such a facility and lead to optimization of toroidal fusion plasmas in general. This science-based predictive capability, which was cited in the FESAC integrated planning document (IPPA, 2000), represents a significant opportunity for the DOE Office of Science to further the understanding of fusion plasmas to a level unparalleled worldwide.

Book DOE s Comprehensive Program Management Plan for Magnetic Fusion Energy

Download or read book DOE s Comprehensive Program Management Plan for Magnetic Fusion Energy written by United States. Congress. House. Committee on Science and Technology. Subcommittee on Energy Research and Production and published by . This book was released on 1984 with total page 216 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book A Review of the DOE Plan for U S  Fusion Community Participation in the ITER Program

Download or read book A Review of the DOE Plan for U S Fusion Community Participation in the ITER Program written by National Research Council and published by National Academies Press. This book was released on 2009-02-21 with total page 56 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: ITER presents the United States and its international partners with the opportunity to explore new and exciting frontiers of plasma science while bringing the promise of fusion energy closer to reality. The ITER project has garnered the commitment and will draw on the scientific potential of seven international partners, China, the European Union, India, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Russia, and the United States, countries that represent more than half of the world's population. The success of ITER will depend on each partner's ability to fully engage itself in the scientific and technological challenges posed by advancing our understanding of fusion. In this book, the National Research Council assesses the current U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) plan for U.S. fusion community participation in ITER, evaluates the plan's elements, and recommends appropriate goals, procedures, and metrics for consideration in the future development of the plan.

Book The U S  Program of Fusion Energy Research and Development

Download or read book The U S Program of Fusion Energy Research and Development written by President's Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology (U.S.). Fusion Review Panel and published by . This book was released on 1995 with total page 67 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Fusion Energy  Definitive Cost Estimates for U S  Contributions to an International Experimental Reactor and Better Coordinated DOE Research Are Needed

Download or read book Fusion Energy Definitive Cost Estimates for U S Contributions to an International Experimental Reactor and Better Coordinated DOE Research Are Needed written by United States. Government Accountability Office and published by DIANE Publishing. This book was released on 2007 with total page 36 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Reports on Review of the Fusion Materials Research Program  Review of the Proposed Proof of Principle Programs  Review of the Possible Pathways for Pursuing Burning Plasma Physics  and Comments on the ER Facilities Roadmap

Download or read book Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee Reports on Review of the Fusion Materials Research Program Review of the Proposed Proof of Principle Programs Review of the Possible Pathways for Pursuing Burning Plasma Physics and Comments on the ER Facilities Roadmap written by and published by . This book was released on 1998 with total page 126 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The Fusion Energy Science Advisory Committee was asked to conduct a review of Fusion Materials Research Program (the Structural Materials portion of the Fusion Program) by Dr. Martha Krebs, Director of Energy Research for the Department of Energy. This request was motivated by the fact that significant changes have been made in the overall direction of the Fusion Program from one primarily focused on the milestones necessary to the construction of successively larger machines to one where the necessary scientific basis for an attractive fusion energy system is. better understood. It was in this context that the review of current scientific excellence and recommendations for future goals and balance within the Program was requested.

Book Final Report of the Committee on a Strategic Plan for U S  Burning Plasma Research

Download or read book Final Report of the Committee on a Strategic Plan for U S Burning Plasma Research written by National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and published by National Academies Press. This book was released on 2019-07-01 with total page 341 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Fusion offers the prospect of virtually unlimited energy. The United States and many nations around the world have made enormous progress toward achieving fusion energy. With ITER scheduled to go online within a decade and demonstrate controlled fusion ten years later, now is the right time for the United States to develop plans to benefit from its investment in burning plasma research and take steps to develop fusion electricity for the nation's future energy needs. At the request of the Department of Energy, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine organized a committee to develop a strategic plan for U.S. fusion research. The final report's two main recommendations are: (1) The United States should remain an ITER partner as the most cost-effective way to gain experience with a burning plasma at the scale of a power plant. (2) The United States should start a national program of accompanying research and technology leading to the construction of a compact pilot plant that produces electricity from fusion at the lowest possible capital cost.

Book Fusion Advisory Panel

Download or read book Fusion Advisory Panel written by Fusion Advisory Panel (U.S.) and published by . This book was released on 1982 with total page 144 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Office of Fusion Energy Sciences  A Ten year Perspective  2015 2025

Download or read book Office of Fusion Energy Sciences A Ten year Perspective 2015 2025 written by and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The vision described here builds on the present U.S. activities in fusion plasma and materials science relevant to the energy goal and extends plasma science at the frontier of discovery. The plan is founded on recommendations made by the National Academies, a number of recent studies by the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee (FESAC), and the Administration's views on the greatest opportunities for U.S. scientific leadership. This report highlights five areas of critical importance for the U.S. fusion energy sciences enterprise over the next decade: 1) Massively parallel computing with the goal of validated whole-fusion-device modeling will enable a transformation in predictive power, which is required to minimize risk in future fusion energy development steps; 2) Materials science as it relates to plasma and fusion sciences will provide the scientific foundations for greatly improved plasma confinement and heat exhaust; 3) Research in the prediction and control of transient events that can be deleterious to toroidal fusion plasma confinement will provide greater confidence in machine designs and operation with stable plasmas; 4) Continued stewardship of discovery in plasma science that is not expressly driven by the energy goal will address frontier science issues underpinning great mysteries of the visible universe and help attract and retain a new generation of plasma/fusion science leaders; 5) FES user facilities will be kept world-leading through robust operations support and regular upgrades. Finally, we will continue leveraging resources among agencies and institutions and strengthening our partnerships with international research facilities.

Book Interim Report of the Committee on a Strategic Plan for U S  Burning Plasma Research

Download or read book Interim Report of the Committee on a Strategic Plan for U S Burning Plasma Research written by National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and published by National Academies Press. This book was released on 2018-03-19 with total page 61 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In January 2003, President George W. Bush announced that the United States would begin negotiations to join the ITER project and noted that "if successful, ITER would create the first fusion device capable of producing thermal energy comparable to the output of a power plant, making commercially viable fusion power available as soon as 2050." The United States and the other ITER members are now constructing ITER with the aim to demonstrate that magnetically confined plasmas can produce more fusion power than the power needed to sustain the plasma. This is a critical step towards producing and delivering electricity from fusion energy. Since the international establishment of the ITER project, ITER's construction schedule has slipped and ITER's costs have increased significantly, leading to questions about whether the United States should continue its commitment to participate in ITER. This study will advise how to best advance the fusion energy sciences in the United States given developments in the field, the specific international investments in fusion science and technology, and the priorities for the next ten years developed by the community and the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) that were recently reported to Congress. It will address the scientific justification and needs for strengthening the foundations for realizing fusion energy given a potential choice of U.S. participation or not in the ITER project, and develops future scenarios in either case. This interim report assesses the current status of U.S. fusion research and of the importance of burning plasma research to the development of fusion energy as well as to plasma science and other science and engineering disciplines. The final report will present strategies that incorporate continued progress toward a burning plasma experiment and a focus on innovation.

Book An Assessment of the Department of Energy s Office of Fusion Energy Sciences Program

Download or read book An Assessment of the Department of Energy s Office of Fusion Energy Sciences Program written by National Research Council and published by National Academies Press. This book was released on 2001-05-07 with total page 112 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The purpose of this assessment of the fusion energy sciences program of the Department of Energy's (DOE's) Office of Science is to evaluate the quality of the research program and to provide guidance for the future program strategy aimed at strengthening the research component of the program. The committee focused its review of the fusion program on magnetic confinement, or magnetic fusion energy (MFE), and touched only briefly on inertial fusion energy (IFE), because MFE-relevant research accounts for roughly 95 percent of the funding in the Office of Science's fusion program. Unless otherwise noted, all references to fusion in this report should be assumed to refer to magnetic fusion. Fusion research carried out in the United States under the sponsorship of the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences (OFES) has made remarkable strides over the years and recently passed several important milestones. For example, weakly burning plasmas with temperatures greatly exceeding those on the surface of the Sun have been created and diagnosed. Significant progress has been made in understanding and controlling instabilities and turbulence in plasma fusion experiments, thereby facilitating improved plasma confinement-remotely controlling turbulence in a 100-million-degree medium is a premier scientific achievement by any measure. Theory and modeling are now able to provide useful insights into instabilities and to guide experiments. Experiments and associated diagnostics are now able to extract enough information about the processes occurring in high-temperature plasmas to guide further developments in theory and modeling. Many of the major experimental and theoretical tools that have been developed are now converging to produce a qualitative change in the program's approach to scientific discovery. The U.S. program has traditionally been an important source of innovation and discovery for the international fusion energy effort. The goal of understanding at a fundamental level the physical processes governing observed plasma behavior has been a distinguishing feature of the program.