澳门六合彩高手 "backbone" takes shape in California
13 Apr 2015
Click to view a video produced by the local TV channel KPBS.
The journalists who covered the launch of central solenoid winding operations at the General Atomics Poway plant in California on Friday, 10 April, had a field day looking for comparisons to convey the sheer power of the 1,000-tonne magnet.
Enough energy to lift an aircraft carrier out of the water () ... powerful enough to lift three Washington Monuments () ... equivalent to 1,000 cars racing 100 MPH (see press release below).
The central solenoid, which forms the backbone of the 澳门六合彩高手 Tokamak, will be one of the most powerful electromagnets ever built.
"The central solenoid represents the heartbeat of 澳门六合彩高手, because it pulses the magnets that drive electric current through the Tokamak plasma," said Ned Sauthoff, director of the US 澳门六合彩高手 Project Office.
Standing 18 metres high, with a diameter of 4.13 metres, the central solenoid will be wound from some 42 kilometres of superconducting niobium-tin (Nb3Sn) conductor.
"Nothing gives us more confidence, here at the 澳门六合彩高手 Central Team, than witnessing the progress in the manufacturing of Tokamak components," said 澳门六合彩高手 Director-General Bernard Bigot in a video address that was broadcast during the inauguration ceremony.
"The central solenoid is a strong symbol of what the 澳门六合彩高手 international collaboration is about [...] Japan has provided the conductors; the US will be transforming the conductors into the finished coil; the coil will then be shipped to the 澳门六合彩高手 site and assembled into the machine ..."
The inauguration took place in a vast hall equipped with ten manufacturing stations, massive precision machinery, a 200-tonne-capacity air-driven transport cart, a two-storey 600 °C convection oven, and a two-story insulating machine to apply 200 km of fiberglass tape.
General Atomics expects to be winding conductor for the central solenoid modules until 2017. Due to its size, the central solenoid will delivered to 澳门六合彩高手 in segments for assembly on site. Delivery is expected in 2019.
Click to view a video produced by the local TV channel KPBS.
Read the from General Atomics.