КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @rxch6057
    @rxch6057 8 років тому +59

    and... IT FUCKING WORKED!

  • @MarcelKlein88
    @MarcelKlein88 8 років тому +126

    What a masterpiece of engineering! I hope the machine runs as expected, I can't wait for your first results!

    • @mrmathews4900
      @mrmathews4900 7 років тому +6

      It's looking good so far :) www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13493

    • @leocorral
      @leocorral 5 років тому

      It was able to contain the plasma for the time they needed but it was just a proof of concept

    • @michaelkasili
      @michaelkasili 5 років тому

      Thanks Professor...lol

  • @ThePostApocalypticInventor
    @ThePostApocalypticInventor 10 років тому +91

    Bravo! This is a great explanation of the basic components involved in this marvelous project! I wish I could visit the Torus-Hall in real life ! Too bad that only such a small number of people watched this video until now. I wish you guys good luck with the project !

    • @TilmanBaumann
      @TilmanBaumann 6 років тому +2

      Since you speak German. Listen to episode 36 of the alternativlos podcast. They go into fascinating details. Especially about the ancillary support systems. Totally worth it.

  • @SUBboy
    @SUBboy 8 років тому +45

    Plasma at 100,000,000° C, and it's just 30cm from magnets at -270°C. I know that isn't something new, but damn that is just brutal.

  • @beto4655
    @beto4655 4 роки тому +8

    Viewing this takes me back almost 40 years when I left the Wendelstein project, then located at the original IPP north of Munich. For me, very exciting to see that the project is still alive. Congratulations to all my colleagues from those days and to the continuing team.

  • @89elmonster
    @89elmonster 8 років тому +299

    200 years later: "Remember when fusion devices used to be huge? now they fit in my pocket"

    • @sidviscous5959
      @sidviscous5959 8 років тому +27

      +Jarmahent 200 years later: "Arouk zugzug alunda Lana."

    • @MetallF
      @MetallF 8 років тому +66

      +Jarmahent more like 50 years, or less. We are the generation that witnessed the rise and "fall" of so much tech like the floppy and cd, just to name a couple. Let's just hope that the degenerate ideologies of political and religious men doesn't destroy this.

    • @dibbidydoo4318
      @dibbidydoo4318 8 років тому +3

      +MetallF in 50 years it still cost hundreds of thousands of dollars compared to today's billions of dollars.

    • @nicol1146
      @nicol1146 8 років тому +27

      +MetallF Yeah like we've done with nuclear power. Thanks to technology, now my nuclear powered smartphone never runs out of energy. And my car with the tiny nuclear power plant works great as always.

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 8 років тому +29

      +MetallF Or the ignorance of the masses on how such things work. So many don't understand chemistry let alone nuclear chemistry.
      "Chemicals are bad, and radiation will turn me into a squid."

  • @hunty11
    @hunty11 8 років тому +29

    Very nice video, particularly the section from around 3:30 showing how the machine is made up in a clear and logical order. I wish there were videos like this about other machines. Thanks.

  • @Cuix
    @Cuix 8 років тому +4

    This is some straight-up impossible sci-fi babble. Incredible and beautiful work.

  • @Sancarn
    @Sancarn 6 років тому +2

    This is the best way to explain engineering. I wish museums did this kind of thing with stuff. Like a piece by piece reconstruction of an object and explaining each part in detail, why it's needed etc.

  • @TheJaredtheJaredlong
    @TheJaredtheJaredlong 8 років тому +296

    There's engineering, and then there's German engineering.

    • @TTuoTT
      @TTuoTT 7 років тому +11

      There's also Japanese, Italian and American engineering. Chinese coming soon.

    • @TilmanBaumann
      @TilmanBaumann 6 років тому +7

      Of course it's a very international project. But thaks for the flattery.

    • @yallowrosa
      @yallowrosa 4 роки тому

      somewhat twisted indeed, will it work?

  • @nomad3239
    @nomad3239 7 років тому +86

    This thing must have been an absolute nightmare to 3D model and design.

    • @carlosdgutierrez6570
      @carlosdgutierrez6570 6 років тому +18

      Alex Rutherford just imagine what kind of nightmare must have been built the actual machine

    • @johnsteel5347
      @johnsteel5347 4 роки тому +8

      Luckily the magnetic coils were designed using a supercomputer

    • @danthemancasey
      @danthemancasey 3 роки тому +5

      Where you see a nightmare I see a wet-dream!

  • @DaveTerrasidio
    @DaveTerrasidio 8 років тому +12

    Excellent. Also, I love how it looks like something from 'Akira'. :)

  • @murch2
    @murch2 8 років тому +8

    Against several reasons that sometimes humans make me shame, this cientists make me proud to be one human. Great video and .. Amazing machine.

  • @OlivierSuire
    @OlivierSuire 10 років тому +11

    Very clear and informative. Thank you so much !

  • @danfechter2923
    @danfechter2923 8 років тому +1

    I congratulate everyone involved with this project. I hope it works as hoped! Even if it does not, this kind of experimentation helps advance our understanding of the science, and another forward step is made.

  • @afelipe2001
    @afelipe2001 8 років тому

    extremely detailed and explained clearly and in a simple manner. awesome video.

  • @360AgencyBerlin
    @360AgencyBerlin 2 роки тому +1

    So Powerful! Mind blowing to see that such an advanced technology can look like so organic!

  • @johnnythreefour2902
    @johnnythreefour2902 8 років тому +3

    what a crazy looking machine. Amazing engineering.

  • @GrainBrain
    @GrainBrain 8 років тому +1

    Extremely complicated and extremely necessary thing.

  • @bl4ck1c32k8
    @bl4ck1c32k8 8 років тому +1

    Amazing engineering work!

  • @Orangino4u
    @Orangino4u 8 років тому +2

    A beautiful project !! Keep up the good work !!

  • @DudeonetoNothin
    @DudeonetoNothin 8 років тому +16

    Needs more cowbell!

  • @jjjddd2937
    @jjjddd2937 8 років тому

    so many questions !!! this is truly a feat for engineering, physics, humanity.media outlets said it may be turned on this month. good luck.

  • @rafaelsuarez8250
    @rafaelsuarez8250 8 років тому

    That is an amazing video. Congrats.

  • @GNU_Linux_for_good
    @GNU_Linux_for_good 8 років тому +1

    Wow! What an amazing video.

  • @FirstNameLastName-okayyoutube
    @FirstNameLastName-okayyoutube 8 років тому

    This is great work =) Not to full of buzz words nor over focus on technical aspects. I would love to see some historical modeling on how the puncture points were worked out.
    So many videos out there say "quantum mechanics" in both an attempt to impress as well as divert attention =( Obviously here we are dealing with energy levels mixed with I guess it may be called steric strain, but a common language description like this video would go a long way in demonstrating confidence in future experimentation!

  • @interstellar799
    @interstellar799 8 років тому

    Great animation and explanation

  • @karlalexandervanniekerk3956
    @karlalexandervanniekerk3956 10 років тому

    very insightful, thank you

  • @jairtoralva830
    @jairtoralva830 8 років тому

    awesome, great video!

  • @abudabi2222
    @abudabi2222 8 років тому +4

    This is what makes life a whole lot better everyday. that's what i know.

  • @mikegLXIVMM
    @mikegLXIVMM 7 років тому +2

    Fusion power has been "Just around the corner" for many years.
    I hope this works.

  • @wihlke
    @wihlke 7 років тому +1

    This animation helped me complete my stellerator! Now when the output ratio has finally surpassed 1.0 so I can power my gaming rig :) Thanks

  • @hectorsantos4662
    @hectorsantos4662 7 років тому +7

    the most complicated donut on the history of mankind

  • @TheRealPlato
    @TheRealPlato 8 років тому +2

    Thanks for the explanation, good luck containing hot plasma!

  • @matthuckabey007
    @matthuckabey007 4 роки тому +1

    Outstanding.

  • @Volthan
    @Volthan 7 років тому

    Great video!

  • @markussieben2862
    @markussieben2862 10 років тому

    Very nice explanation.

  • @AndrewLomenzo
    @AndrewLomenzo 8 років тому +74

    creepy music in the video makes this thing look like a doomsday machine.

    • @slashiesmokesweed
      @slashiesmokesweed 8 років тому +4

      I know, right? The video is fantastic, but the background music is freaking me out.

    • @jaikee9477
      @jaikee9477 8 років тому +3

      +Andrew Lomenzo J.S.Bach, one of the top 3 greatest composers of all time, is "creepy music" to you? Wow.

    • @AndrewLomenzo
      @AndrewLomenzo 8 років тому +10

      Jan Aike I didn't realize Bach composed his music on MIDI synths.. my mistake..

    • @jerryeberts
      @jerryeberts 7 років тому +4

      Only his later music.

  • @theultimatereductionist7592
    @theultimatereductionist7592 4 роки тому

    Forget the International Space Station or CERN. THIS is the most complicated expensive & amazing machine built by humans!

  • @suhasbharadwaj5457
    @suhasbharadwaj5457 8 років тому

    great going guys !!!

  • @SUBboy
    @SUBboy 8 років тому

    Goddamn that coil system is one of the prettiest inventions I've seen in a while!

  • @Neura1net
    @Neura1net 7 років тому +1

    This is awesome

  • @megatwingo
    @megatwingo 8 років тому +4

    The first test to generate plasma was successful now. It seems to work.

  • @bubbletanking
    @bubbletanking 7 років тому

    The narrator and the video itself keep giving me a Prokhor Zakharov vibe from Alpha Centauri. Or otherwise, simply a vibe of the datalinks therein. It's great.

  • @ddorman365
    @ddorman365 7 років тому

    Thank you Colleagues, well done, I'm sure you will be greatly surprised with the experiment outcomes, good luck, your friend and colleague, peace and love, Doug:).PS Beautiful job Max Plank Ins., Aveterzang!!

  • @stephenangus7296
    @stephenangus7296 7 років тому

    The Plans and documentations would be amazing. The sensors would be of great interest to the large spacecraft industry yet future.

  • @michaelneil3449
    @michaelneil3449 7 років тому +14

    Who do I need to talk with to buy 1 of these Wendelstein 7-X

  • @bananlaksen
    @bananlaksen 8 років тому +24

    wtf is up with the background music? How do you even find shit like that?

  • @sharinganproz
    @sharinganproz 8 років тому +30

    so how do they capture the electricity?

    • @plasmaphysik
      @plasmaphysik 8 років тому +35

      +クリス
      Wendelstein 7-X is a research device, it will not produce energy. A future fusion power plant: www.ipp.mpg.de/14743/kraftwerk

    • @AdamNair
      @AdamNair 8 років тому

      +Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik ITER's test power plant uses a Tokamak right? Would the next step in this Wendelstein 7-X research be the creation of a Stellarator based power plant?

    • @TJGalloway1
      @TJGalloway1 8 років тому +8

      +クリス Neither fusion or fission reactors 'capture electricity.' They're used to heat up water into steam which drives turbines to generate electricity.

    • @hjembrentkent6181
      @hjembrentkent6181 8 років тому

      +Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik How would you capture the energy? Thermocouples?

    • @OyVeey
      @OyVeey 8 років тому

      +Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik That means it'll take a lot of energy to test its confinement ability then, if it's not feeding energy back into the process?

  • @WiseManOncePosted
    @WiseManOncePosted 8 років тому +6

    And to think, for all of the staggering technology, time and understanding of thermodynamics/particle physics required to construct such a revolutionary object, it still pales in comparison to the human brain in terms of complexity.

    • @orionti6215
      @orionti6215 6 років тому

      and the same complex brain is so simpleton in many cases :D

  • @MELODICACHANEL
    @MELODICACHANEL 8 років тому

    estoy feliz ,el futuro parece maravilloso .

  • @rafaellisboa8493
    @rafaellisboa8493 7 років тому

    Success!!!

  • @TTuoTT
    @TTuoTT 7 років тому

    We call it a Tokamak. And the Upgrade to the basic system of a "donut shaped magnetic field" designed for holding a plasma stream is called Stelerator

  • @dfd6787
    @dfd6787 8 років тому

    Right now this thing is huge, but there will be time, when we will bring one like this along on our road trip like we do with our laptops and cellphones now.

  • @yqisq6966
    @yqisq6966 7 років тому

    awesome!

    • @holdinmcgroin8639
      @holdinmcgroin8639 7 років тому

      It barely looks like something a human would design. It looks like alien technology with how organic it all is.

  • @qualityoflife01
    @qualityoflife01 8 років тому

    well done

  • @hermanwilliamsiii6986
    @hermanwilliamsiii6986 8 років тому

    Wow!!

  • @felixnagl5962
    @felixnagl5962 4 роки тому

    'Thus the technical realisation of a large optimised stellarator is far more complex than one would have expected given the apparent simplicity of the original idea.'
    Sure, because everyone thought this is simple.

  • @finnheinemann3682
    @finnheinemann3682 7 років тому +1

    Could you reveal a 3d model of this for my physics referate please?

  • @GDplusEng
    @GDplusEng 8 років тому +5

    interesting video, but what you don't explain is how you "harvest" the heat for energy production?

    • @plasmaphysik
      @plasmaphysik 8 років тому +14

      +GDplusEng
      Wendelstein will not produce energy. A future power plant: www.ipp.mpg.de/14743/kraftwerk

    • @jjfake9042
      @jjfake9042 8 років тому +2

      +Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik ITER is just a bigger tokamak.

    • @Biltospill
      @Biltospill 7 років тому +1

      you are concerned about the easiest process in this very complicated process??. They will find that this design will not be able to contain and leakage will be an issue which will cause random cooling. I believe the answer lies in studying the sun and learning how the sun keeps its shape, only then will you be able to contain plasma.. this donut shape will prove to be too complicated and using a rotating field and the shape of a ball or globe will prove to be the ultimate solution.

  • @Antares_451
    @Antares_451 8 років тому +2

    Imagine what other project they have been working on ;)

  • @bennysh
    @bennysh 7 років тому +1

    I think this machine can be smaller now with the new kind of superconductors. amazing engineering nonetheless..
    thanks for the clear view of how this thing is built.

    • @TabulaRasa001
      @TabulaRasa001 7 років тому

      Fusion reactors regardless of design will always be more efficient the larger the design. Not as relevant for a research reactor but certainly for a production power station.

  • @tremendous9703
    @tremendous9703 8 років тому

    congratulation on the successful test.
    for how long do you expect the fusion to operate continuously ?
    what objectives do you need to research with the w7x and why does it take 50 years for a economically useful power reactor?
    what is the difference between the w7x and the LHD in japan, i mean why is the w7x so hyped in media ?
    arent all types of tokamak reactors, like ITER, now obsolete ?
    'gluckwunsch' and i hope you guys can free us from oil-drama as fast as possible !

  • @Guds777
    @Guds777 7 років тому

    But if or when fusion reactor is possible, won't it just work similar like a transformer, primary and secondary coils, plasma in primary and output power in secondary. And some hybrid metal/graphite/nanographene core in between

  • @user-zn9is7qi1c
    @user-zn9is7qi1c 8 років тому

    CONGRATS

  • @YouNeedToHearThis
    @YouNeedToHearThis 8 років тому +3

    Great video, but my goodness is that background music annoying. Almost impossible to listen to with headphones on.

  • @TerryB751
    @TerryB751 7 років тому

    What about safety concerns in the event of failure in parts of the system?
    Time has taught lessons regarding catastrophes in fission reactors throughout the world.

    • @plasmaphysik
      @plasmaphysik 7 років тому +2

      see www.ipp.mpg.de/14767/sicherheit

  • @sizzla123
    @sizzla123 3 роки тому

    Good simulation

  • @Fummy007
    @Fummy007 8 років тому +1

    Anyone know the music at the start? I think its Bach but can't find it anywhere.

    • @randallpcrittenden
      @randallpcrittenden 7 років тому +9

      Bach's Well Tempered Clavier Prelude and Fugue No. 1 in C major BWV 846

  • @free_spirit1
    @free_spirit1 4 роки тому

    Anyone who is knowledgeable enough, please let me know:
    Which component supports the vacuum? The inner jacket (red at 5:40) or the cryostat (brownish red, 7:16)? How were the panels of the internal jacket made (red at 5:40)? Is each individual panel stamped and then welded? Are both the cryostat and the inner chamber kept at a vacuum or is it only the inner chamber?
    Also, what determines the minimum size of the stellarator? Does it have to be this large or can it also be made smaller?

  • @Wzymedia
    @Wzymedia 7 років тому

    Warp drives should be next on their "to-do" list

  • @littleben619
    @littleben619 8 років тому

    whats it do once it it is running?

  • @PyrrhoVonHyperborea
    @PyrrhoVonHyperborea 7 років тому

    what would happen, when the magnetic "cage" would stop working from one moment to the next, while the plasma is on max temperature?

  • @TheFloVoss
    @TheFloVoss 3 роки тому

    Gives me vibes from the Video "Dimensions"

  • @eloirossellivilardell9603
    @eloirossellivilardell9603 7 років тому

    Why does it need to have a 5-fold symmetry? :o

  • @lupahole
    @lupahole 8 років тому

    fingers crossed, the design achieves fusion improvement.

  • @Duraltia
    @Duraltia 7 років тому

    Soo... How do you ACTUALLY get energy OUT of this?
    Would one just run a set of heat exchangers near the plasma and from then on it acts like an ordinary steam engine on steroids?

  • @highwaltage
    @highwaltage 7 років тому

    im just an idiot. but why are all reactors donut shaped? if we are to mimic he sun. should we not have a central focal point for the plasma in a sphere? counter rotating fields using coils like in a rodin wind?

  • @cfritschewiesel
    @cfritschewiesel 8 років тому

    It will happen, once!

  • @denizbahadrdemirdas5754
    @denizbahadrdemirdas5754 7 років тому

    wow

  • @richardhead8264
    @richardhead8264 7 років тому +1

    Practical application?

  • @yelectric1893
    @yelectric1893 4 роки тому

    :D more need to know

  • @calvinsylveste8474
    @calvinsylveste8474 7 років тому

    What would ReBCO tapes bring to the stellarator table?

    • @Ni999
      @Ni999 6 років тому

      Dukky Drake Same thing they're going to bring to tokamaks. Much higher efficiency, less bulk and lower cost. ua-cam.com/video/KkpqA8yG9T4/v-deo.html

  • @filipebarbieri6367
    @filipebarbieri6367 8 років тому +5

    Hello there. I am currently graduate in Business but I plan to go for science and energy...Which graduation course should I take in order to be part of the fusion energy development, as well as other energy sources? I am 23 years old from Brazil, thanks in advance.

    • @rcguy96
      @rcguy96 8 років тому

      +Filipe Barbieri UC Berkeley has a great Nuclear Engineering program that you could check out.

    • @TJGalloway1
      @TJGalloway1 8 років тому

      Hi Fillipe! You should either get involved in physics or electrical engineering.

    • @filipebarbieri6367
      @filipebarbieri6367 8 років тому

      thank you guys! I am looking something like that!

    • @essellar
      @essellar 8 років тому +5

      +Filipe Barbieri The big problems to solve at the moment are mostly in the area of computational fluid dynamics. That's reflected here in the shape of the torus, but it also applies to the design of turbines -- it doesn't matter whether those are gas/steam turbines for conventional thermal generators (no matter what the heat source may be), water turbines for tidal generators, or wind turbines. It's a four-pronged problem -- physical, mathematical, computational and engineering (you have to be able to build the things you design, and they have to last) -- so there are at least four avenues of approach, all with cross-disciplinary interactions. And don't forget that there's still a lot of room for advancement in delivery and storage systems: batteries are horrible, and we waste a huge amount of what we produce heating up wires.

  • @amdreallyfast
    @amdreallyfast 8 років тому

    Dang. That is one complex machine. How is construction at this stage?

    • @mrmathews4900
      @mrmathews4900 7 років тому

      It's completed. And it's active. Much testing needed to be done, but it looks quite promising thus far: www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13493

  • @radomane
    @radomane 7 років тому

    Hello, can you link me to the music for thise video??

  • @joshuapike5355
    @joshuapike5355 8 років тому +4

    That music is making we want to die

  • @StreamPunks
    @StreamPunks 8 років тому

    Is it on yet?

  • @IzludeTingel
    @IzludeTingel 8 років тому +1

    The Mammon Machine...

  • @jpmorgan187
    @jpmorgan187 8 років тому

    das ist ghut!

  • @coladict
    @coladict 8 років тому +1

    I think I'm missing the part where this thing makes electricity...
    Would have been nice to include that in the video.

    • @D0d0Dada
      @D0d0Dada 8 років тому

      +coladict thats the secret part about it :D

    • @Hortifox_the_gardener
      @Hortifox_the_gardener 8 років тому +2

      This thing isn't targeted to "make" electricity.
      It will rather consume electrical energy from the grid to be operated.
      This is about learning how to control such a reaction, how to sustain it and how to properly use it for energy production (I hate this incorrect term by the way).
      A real power plant would have to be larger and would also require ways to extract the heat (and probably various kinds of radiation for greater yield) from the reaction but it wouldn't need all this complex monitoring and scientific equipment.
      But this lies far ahead.

  • @franckmalers2299
    @franckmalers2299 3 роки тому

    if we only invested 10% of the military budgets around the world in this, it would probably work within a decade

  • @1cy3
    @1cy3 8 років тому

    that music though

  • @jpb10
    @jpb10 8 років тому

    Bach

  • @MahmudulMithun
    @MahmudulMithun 8 років тому +2

    ok google! how to use and where to use and why to use this Wendelstein 7-X ?

  • @MrTHEBEUGEL
    @MrTHEBEUGEL 8 років тому

    creating the every is on thing but harvesting it may be one thing that they haven't shared if they have much idea on how to do so far.

    • @tylerboyes750
      @tylerboyes750 7 років тому

      I believe they're are a few different ideas on how to harvest it, but you're right, we aren't there yet. Still more experiments to do.

  • @samgigote4174
    @samgigote4174 8 років тому

    Is someone trying to light a gas stove in the background?

  • @rhylschermatz5809
    @rhylschermatz5809 8 років тому

    Ce genre de chose me fait dire que l'homme n'est pas si médiocre.Quelle belle machine, un sacré tour de force technique. Cet objet est très beau.

  • @smuckola
    @smuckola 8 років тому

    I've rewinded select parts of this repeatedly, and read all the comments. I still have absolutely no idea what this is. It looks like a steampunk Christmas wreath.

  • @joannawie
    @joannawie 7 років тому

    You should preciesly express, what is the device created for.