Electrostatic Fusion at the University of Illinois: Difference between revisions
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==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
Inertial electrostatic confinement (IEC) is the process by which neutrons are reproduced in a plasma. Tabletop IEC devices, informally referred to as fusors, were first operated in the 1950s. (See ?Fusors,? by Richard Hull on pages 6-12.) More recently, conceptual design studies, undertaken at the Universities of Illinois and Wisconsin, explored the potential for IEC applied to large-scale power generation and space propulsion. This is a brief review of an article sent to ESJ by the author, George Miley.[[Category:Scientific Paper]] | Inertial electrostatic confinement (IEC) is the process by which neutrons are reproduced in a plasma. Tabletop IEC devices, informally referred to as fusors, were first operated in the 1950s. (See ?Fusors,? by Richard Hull on pages 6-12.) More recently, conceptual design studies, undertaken at the Universities of Illinois and Wisconsin, explored the potential for IEC applied to large-scale power generation and space propulsion. This is a brief review of an article sent to ESJ by the author, George Miley. | ||
[[Category:Scientific Paper|electrostatic fusion university illinois]] | |||
Latest revision as of 12:20, 1 January 2017
| Scientific Paper | |
|---|---|
| Title | Electrostatic Fusion at the University of Illinois |
| Author(s) | Leslee A Kulba |
| Keywords | inertial electrostatic confinement, fusors, George Miley, University of Illinois |
| Published | 1998 |
| Journal | Electric Spacecraft Journal |
| Number | 23 |
| Pages | 14-16 |
Abstract
Inertial electrostatic confinement (IEC) is the process by which neutrons are reproduced in a plasma. Tabletop IEC devices, informally referred to as fusors, were first operated in the 1950s. (See ?Fusors,? by Richard Hull on pages 6-12.) More recently, conceptual design studies, undertaken at the Universities of Illinois and Wisconsin, explored the potential for IEC applied to large-scale power generation and space propulsion. This is a brief review of an article sent to ESJ by the author, George Miley.