A Seattle-based company has unveiled its new nuclear fusion prototype with the goal of delivering commercially viable fusion ...
Zap Energy creates fusion in a filament of plasma less than two feet long. The inset image is a high-speed camera photo of a plasma in Zap's device.
Photo: Zap Energy Before we go any further ... but Zap’s approach—the jargon-laden “sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch system”—involves sending a jolt of electrical power through a stream ...
A Seattle-based fusion company has showcased its new prototype device. Called Century, the Zap Energy’s device is claimed to ...
Zap Energy's fusion approach, known as a sheared-flow-stabilized Z pinch, avoids large superconducting magnets and powerful lasers, and is far smaller than conventional systems. To generate net ...
And the commercial ventures need to go further, creating enough energy to put electrons on the electrical grid. Zap’s approach to creating fusion uses a sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch technology.
Zap Energy aims to create carbon-free energy by using heat to force atomic particles to collide and release energy. The company relies on what is known in physics as a "Z-pinch," or passing ...
Fusion company Zap Energy today shared news on progress with its power plant system demo and gave details on the investors of its $130 million round, which GeekWire ...
Pacific Fusions is backed by a Who’s Who of investors, including Hemant Taneja of General Catalyst, who led the Series A ...