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Communication Theory Lab
CTL
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Fusion

Nuclear Fusion Powered by AI and HPC

Vladimir Pimanov, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Applied Mathematics and Computational Science
Dec 4, 12:00 - 13:00

B9 L2 R2325

AI artificial intelligence Fusion simulation

This talk presents advanced simulations with AI-driven optimization to improve the performance of a next-generation plasma-jet-driven magneto-inertial fusion concept.

Lecture 1: Hidden Symmetries and Fusion Energy

Prof. Amitava Bhattacharjee, Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University

Jun 5, 14:30 - 15:30

B20 Auditorium

Hidden Symmetries Fusion energy

The most compelling transformational use of magnetically confined, high-temperature plasma is to realize sustained fusion energy. The tokamak, which is the leading magnetic confinement concept in the world today, first realized in 1958, has the geometry of a torus and toroidal symmetry, giving it good confinement properties. Nevertheless, the tokamak has a number of unresolved stability issues related to its current-carrying plasma that may be obstacles to its ultimate success. In contrast, in the stellarator, the confining magnetic field is mostly produced by external current-carrying coils.

Communication Theory Lab (CTL)

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