ID :
36248
Thu, 12/18/2008 - 13:52
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/36248
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S. Korea, Japan to conduct nuclear fusion studies
SEOUL, Dec. 18 (Yonhap) -- South Korea and Japan plan to embark on joint study of nuclear fusion energy by using the Korean nuclear fusion research facility, the government said Thursday.
The Ministry of Education, Science and Technology said the two countries will
hold talks on Friday in Daejeon, a city 164 kilometers south of Seoul, to discuss
bilateral cooperation in the nuclear fusion energy sector.
South Korea completed the Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research
(KSTAR), a Korean nuclear fusion energy device, last year, which started
generating plasma in June with preparations underway to begin earnest scientific
experiments next year.
The ministry said the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) has proposed to dismantle
a hightech analysis equipment previously attached to its JT-60 Tokamak unit and
use it to test KSTAR. The JT-60 is the process of being disassembled to be
replaced by an updated JT-60SA model.
"The equipment will be sent over free of charge with Japanese researchers allowed
to work side by side with local counterparts," an official said.
He said joint work can cut costs and help forge closer ties between the two
member countries of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER)
project.
South Korea and Japan along with the European Union (EU), the United States,
Japan, Russia, China and India are ITER members that aim to build a operable
fusion power testbed by 2016, followed by 20 years of actual experiments to check
the feasibility the technology.
Once this process is underway a demonstration plant that can actually generate
power is to be set up in the 2040s.
Nuclear fusion causes naturally abundant deuterium and tritium to release helium
and neutron particles that effectively allows the creation of a artificial sun on
Earth. This can then be harnessed to make limitless energy.
yonngong@yna.co.kr
(END)
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The Ministry of Education, Science and Technology said the two countries will
hold talks on Friday in Daejeon, a city 164 kilometers south of Seoul, to discuss
bilateral cooperation in the nuclear fusion energy sector.
South Korea completed the Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research
(KSTAR), a Korean nuclear fusion energy device, last year, which started
generating plasma in June with preparations underway to begin earnest scientific
experiments next year.
The ministry said the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) has proposed to dismantle
a hightech analysis equipment previously attached to its JT-60 Tokamak unit and
use it to test KSTAR. The JT-60 is the process of being disassembled to be
replaced by an updated JT-60SA model.
"The equipment will be sent over free of charge with Japanese researchers allowed
to work side by side with local counterparts," an official said.
He said joint work can cut costs and help forge closer ties between the two
member countries of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER)
project.
South Korea and Japan along with the European Union (EU), the United States,
Japan, Russia, China and India are ITER members that aim to build a operable
fusion power testbed by 2016, followed by 20 years of actual experiments to check
the feasibility the technology.
Once this process is underway a demonstration plant that can actually generate
power is to be set up in the 2040s.
Nuclear fusion causes naturally abundant deuterium and tritium to release helium
and neutron particles that effectively allows the creation of a artificial sun on
Earth. This can then be harnessed to make limitless energy.
yonngong@yna.co.kr
(END)
Download this as a file