Engineers Achieve Nuclear Fusion , by Shooting Projectile , at 14,500 MPH. 'Newsweek' reports that engineers , in England have achieved, a breakthrough in nuclear fusion. Researchers at First Light Fusion designed the method to be as simple as possible:, they fired a giant gun at a fuel sample. This method is known as inertial fusion, where a fuel pellet is compressed and super-heated so that particles fuse together in the nanoseconds before the fuel explodes. 'Newsweek' reports that this is usually achieved by firing a laser or particle beam at the fuel pellet. . First Light Fusion's approach uses a projectile traveling at around 14,500 miles per hour. . First Light Fusion's approach uses a projectile traveling at around 14,500 miles per hour. . The projectile produces pressure , equal to 100 million times that, of the Earth's atmosphere. . Each reaction reportedly produces , enough energy to power an average , home in the U.K. for more than two years. . First Light Fusion said the company believes its unique method is the fastest and cheapest form of commercial fusion power. . 'Newsweek' reports that the company will now begin experiments aimed at producing more energy than it takes to produce the reaction. . If we can get the core physics to work, which I think we can, it potentially has a much faster trajectory to a power plant. The engineering is much simpler. The physics is simpler, Nick Hawker, founder of First Light Fusion, via 'Newsweek'
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