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This special issue’s seven peer-reviewed articles provide a comprehensive summary of the physics basis for SPARC: a compact, high-field, DT burning tokamak, currently under design by a team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Commonwealth Fusion Systems. The SPARC project builds on a remarkable period of progress in the understanding of magnetically confined plasmas achieved collectively by the world’s fusion programs.
Read these blogs from JPP and SPARC
Physics models predict ample margin to net fusion energy in the SPARC tokamak
by Pablo Rodriguez-Fernandez
Validating the physics behind the new MIT- designed fusion experiment
by David L. Chandler
Rendering of SPARC, a compact, high-field, DT burning tokamak, currently under design by a team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Commonwealth Fusion Systems. Its mission is to create and confine a plasma that produces net fusion energy.
"These studies put SPARC on a firm scientific basis. When we build and operate the machine as described in these papers, we fully expect to meet our target for fusion gain and produce a wealth of new and important information on burning plasmas”
Guest Editorial Author - Martin Greenwald, Plasma Science & Fusion Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
“JPP is proud to host this set of important papers, which lay out how to use state-of-the-art plasma physics science to design and engineer a fusion reactor experiment. Plasma physicists are part of a vibrant scientific community that is driven by technological advances. We are excited to be the platform chosen by the SPARC team for this set of important scientific publications. This reinforces a standard for the way in which new experiments can be proposed: in an open-access, peer-reviewed format."
Journal of Plasma Physics Editor - William Dorland, University of Maryland, USA
Special Issue Editor
Bill Dorland
Guest Editorial by:
Martin Greenwald