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The H-1 National Fusion Research Facility
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Latest news:Australia to host 2011 International Stellarator/Heliotron WorkshopAustralian Fusion Energy Research gets prominent coverage from ANSTO/ANU MoU signing Congratulations to Future Fellow Dr. Matthew Hole Upcoming events:18th International Stellarator/Heliotron WorkshopThe H-1 National Plasma Fusion Research Facility (H-1NF) is the Australian focus of basic experimental research on magnetically confined plasma, important in developing fusion energy, a clean, virtually inexhaustible energy source that powers the sun and stars. Plasma — ionised gas — makes up 99% of the visible universe, and plasma phenomena are important in everything from stars and space exploration to the processing of electronic materials. Plasma physics is thus a highly interdisciplinary endeavour because of the range of physics areas it encompasses (fluid, atomic, electromagnetic, optical and surface physics) and the diverse technologies employed in plasma experiments (electronics, radio-frequency technologies, magnetics, lasers, microwaves and spectroscopy). The facility was developed from the “H-1 Heliac” toroidal stellarator experiment in the Research School of Physical Sciences and Engineering at the Australian National University. The innovative plasma geometry of the heliac allows investigation of basic plasma physics, and exploration of ideas for improved design of the fusion power stations that will follow the ITER international fusion experiment. Argon plasma in H-1The objectives of this facility are to provide:
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Please direct all enquiries to: H-1NF enquiries |
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