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The Quest for a Fusion Energy Reactor - An Insider's Account of the INTOR Workshop (Hardcover)
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The Quest for a Fusion Energy Reactor - An Insider's Account of the INTOR Workshop (Hardcover)
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Concerns over the planet's limited energy sources are not new. For
the past half-century, scientists from around the world have
explored substitutes for fossil fuels. Among them, developed
nations have invested considerable resources in the development of
nuclear fusion technology. Thus, in 1978, scientists and engineers
from Europe, Japan, the United States, and the former Soviet Union
joined together under the banner of the INTOR Workshop
(INternational group working on a TOkamak Reactor) to share their
individual research on nuclear fusion's viability as an energy
source. Their ten years of cooperative work on the design and
development possibilities for harnessing nuclear energy planted the
seeds for the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor
(ITER), construction of which began in 2008 and whose goal it is to
demonstrate the scientific and technical feasibility of fusion
power. Weston Stacey served as the INTOR Workshop's vice-chairman
(and U.S. representative) and kept a journal in which he detailed
both the scientific participants' technical work as well as their
more political interactions. In this first person narrative, Stacey
provides an accessible account (introducing explanatory material
when necessary) of the research and development activities
conducted to determine the viability of designing, constructing,
and operating a tokamak experimental power reactor. Of more human
interest were the obstacles the Workshop leaders and participants
faced as they advanced their own countries' priorities while
striving to make progress on the global future of nuclear fusion
technology. Personal anecdotes illuminate the mixing of cultures
and the challenges presented by the Cold War's unique political
climate. While the focus of the book centers on the history of the
INTOR Workshop, Stacey paints a full picture of the people and
places involved in the work, how decisions were made, and how these
efforts laid the groundwork for ITER's subsequent development. This
text will appeal not only to those studying fusion science and
engineering, but to anyone interested in a unique story of how
international relations and scientific study intersect, ultimately
one of collaboration for the sake of a common goal.
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