JET: Wikis

  

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JET
JET in 1991
Type Tokamak
Operation date 1983-
Major radius 2.96 meters
Minor Radius 1.25–2.10 meters
Plasma volume 100 m³
Magnetic field 3.45 teslas (toroidal)
Heating 38 megawatts

JET, the Joint European Torus is the largest man-made magnetic confinement plasma physics experiment currently in operation. Its main purpose is to open the way to future nuclear fusion experimental reactors such as ITER and DEMO.

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Construction

The reactor is situated on an old Navy airfield near Culham, Oxfordshire - RNAS Culham (HMS Hornbill), in the UK: the construction of the buildings which house the project was undertaken by Tarmac Construction,[1] starting in 1978 with the Torus Hall being completed in January 1982. Construction of the experiment itself began immediately after the completion of the Torus Hall, with the first experiments beginning in 1983.

The components for the JET experiment came from manufacturers all over Europe, with these components transported to the site. Because of the extremely high power requirements for the tokamak, and the fact that power draw from the main grid is limited, two large flywheel generators were constructed to provide this necessary power. One generator provides power for the 32 toroidal field coils, the other for inner poloidal field coils. The outer field coils draw their power from the grid.

Operating history

JET was originally set up by Euratom with a discriminatory employment system that allowed non-British staff to be employed at more than twice the salaries of their British equivalents. The British staff eventually had this practice declared illegal, and substantial damages were paid at the end of 1999 to UKAEA staff, and later to contractors. This was the immediate cause of the ending of Euratom's operation of the facility.

In December 1999 JET's international contract ended and the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) then took over managing the safety and operation of the JET facilities on behalf of its European partners. From that time (2000), JET's experimental programme was then co-ordinated by the European Fusion Development Agreement (EFDA) Close Support Unit.

JET operated throughout 2003 culminating in experiments using small amounts of tritium. For most of 2004 it was shut down for a series of major upgrades increasing total available heating power to over 40 MW, enabling further studies relevant to the development of ITER to be undertaken. In the future it is possible that JET-EP (Enhanced Performance) will further increase the record for fusion power.

In late September 2006, experimental campaign C16 was started. Its objective is to study ITER-like operation scenarios.

Equipment capability

JET is equipped with remote handling facilities to cope with the radioactivity produced by Deuterium-Tritium (D-T) fuel, which is the fuel proposed for the first generation of fusion power plants. Pending construction of ITER, JET remains the only large fusion reactor with facilities dedicated to handling the radioactivity released from D-T fusion. The power production record-breaking runs from JET and TFTR used 50-50 D-T fuel mixes.

During a full D-T experimental campaign in 1997 JET achieved a world record peak fusion power of 16 MW which equates to a measured Q of approximately 0.7. Q is the ratio of fusion alpha heating power to input heating power. In order to achieve a burning plasma, a Q value greater than 1 is required. This figure does not include other power requirements for operation, most notably confinement. A commercial fusion reactor would probably need a Q value somewhere between 15 and 22. As of 1998, a higher Q of 1.25 is claimed for the JT-60 tokamak; however, this was not achieved under real D-T conditions but estimated from experiments performed with a pure deuterium (D-D) plasma. Similar extrapolations have not been made for JET, but it is likely that increases in Q over the 1997 measurements could now be achieved if permission to run another full D-T campaign was granted. Work has now begun on ITER to further develop fusion power.

Machine information

Internal view of the JET tokamak superimposed with an image of a plasma taken with a visible spectrum video camera.
  • Weight of the vacuum vessel: 100 tonnes
  • Weight of the toroidal field coils: 384 tonnes
  • Weight of the iron core: 2800 tonnes
  • Wall material: Primarily carbon fibre composite, beryllium coated.
  • Plasma major radius: 2.96 m
  • Plasma minor radius: 2.10 m (vertical), 1.25 m (horizontal)
  • Flat top pulse length: 20–60 s
  • Toroidal magnetic field (on plasma axis): 3.45 T
  • Plasma current: 3.2 MA (circular plasma), 4.8 MA (D-shape plasma)
  • Lifetime of the plasma: 20–60 s
  • Auxiliary heating:
  • Major diagnostics:
    • Visible/infrared video cameras
    • Numerous magnetic coils – provide magnetic field, current and energy measurements
    • Thomson scattering spectroscopy – provides electron temperature and electron density profiles of the plasma
    • Charge exchange spectroscopy – provides impurity ion temperature, density and rotation profiles
    • Interferometers – measure line integrated plasma density
    • Electron cyclotron emission antennas – fast, high resolution electron temperature profiles
    • Visible/UV/X-ray spectrometers – temperatures and densities
    • Neutron diagnostics:
      • Neutron counting: Number of neutrons leaving the plasma relates directly to the fusion power.
      • Neutron spectroscopy – Neutron energy relates to the ion velocity distribution and hence the fuel reactivity.
    • Bolometers – energy loss from the plasma
    • Various material probes – inserted into the plasma to take direct measurements of flow rates and temperatures
    • Soft X-ray cameras to examine MHD properties of plasmas
    • Time resolved neutron yield monitor
    • Hard X-ray monitors
    • Electron Cyclotron Emission Spatial Scanners

References

  1. ^ Berry Ritchie, The Story of Tarmac Page 100, Published by James & James (Publishers) Ltd, 1999

External links

Sources

Coordinates: 51°39′33″N 1°13′35″W / 51.65917°N 1.22639°W / 51.65917; -1.22639


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Jet may refer to:

Contents

Aerospace

Engineering

Mathematics and science

  • Jet (mathematics)
  • Jet bundle
  • Jet (fluid), a coherent stream of fluid that is projected into a surrounding medium, usually from some kind of a nozzle or aperture.
  • Jet (particle physics), a narrow cone of hadrons and other particles produced by the hadronization of a quark or gluon in a particle physics or heavy ion experiment.
  • Polar jet, a phenomenon in astronomy, where streams of matter are emitted along the axis of rotation of a compact object.
  • Relativistic jet, an extremely powerful jet of plasma which emerges from the centers of some active galaxies.
  • Jet (lignite), a type of coal used in some jewelry (origin of the adjective "jet-black")
  • Jet, a type of upper atmosphere lightning phenomena.
  • Joint European Torus, an experimental nuclear fusion machine.

Music

Fiction

Sports

  • New York Jets, an American football team
  • Jet 14, a class of racing sailboats primarily located from the U.S. Atlantic coast to Ohio
  • Delhi Jets, A Cricket team from Indian Cricket League
  • Winnipeg Jets, a former professional hockey team
  • Ipswich Jets, Australian rugby league team
  • Jet, Diane Youdale, one of the stars of Gladiators
  • Benny "The Jet" Urquidez, A kickboxer, coreographer and actor Benny Urquidez
  • Newcastle United Jets, Champions of a professional football competition in Australia called the A-League.
  • Newtown Jets, Australian rugby league team
  • Jet, aka Monica Carlson, the Women's Champion of the first season of the 2008 revival of American Gladiators

Culture

Products and business

Places

Other


Simple English

The English Wiktionary has a dictionary definition (meanings of a word) for:

JET, Jet or Jets all have a wide variety of meanings:

Contents

Science

  • A jet is a stream of liquid or gas which is moving together in parallel.
  • In fluid or gas engineering contexts, a jet is a stream of material ejected from a nozzle, or a nozzle designed to produce such a stream.
  • In automotive terms, a jet is a tube, nozzle, or passageway through which petrol is metered within a carburetor.
  • In geology, jet (lignite) (or Whitby jet) is a mineraloid (mineral-like material).
  • In meteorology, a blue jet is a form of upper atmospheric lightning.
  • In meteorology, a jet is an electrical discharge that occurs high above the cumulonimbus cloud of an active thunderstorm.
  • In astrophysics, a relativistic jet is a stream of fast-moving plasma emitted at nearly 300,000 km/s (the speed of light) from an active galaxy. A similar phenomenon on a much smaller scale is a polar jet. These are emitted during star formation from either side of the accretion disk, along the two polar axes.
  • In nuclear and particle physics, a jet is a cone of hadrons
  • In nuclear physics, the Joint European Torus or JET is an experimental Nuclear fusion reactor.
  • In mathematics, a jet is an operation that produces an abstract polynomial
  • In mathematics, a jet bundle (or spray) is a manipulation of differential equations
  • In software engineering, Microsoft Jet Database Engine is now deprecated; the "Jet" stands for Joint Engine Technology
  • In software engineering, Java Emitter Templates (JET) is a Template engine that is part of the Eclipse EMF project.

Aerospace

  • Jet engine
  • Jet aircraft
  • Jet Airways, an airline based in India serving domestic and international routes
  • JetBlue Airways, an airline based on New York
  • Jetstar Airlines, an Australian airline servicing domestic and International routes

Water

  • Water jet

Music

  • Jet, a hit rock music single on the 1973 album Band on the Run by Wings
  • Jet-CD (also known as Jet), 1998's album by J-pop band, Puffy AmiYumi
  • Jet, a rock band from Melbourne, Australia
  • Jet, a rock band that existed from 1971 to 1974, from Genoa, northern Italy
  • Jet, a glam rock band from England that recorded one eponymous album in 1975
  • The Jets, a family band from Minneapolis, Minnesota that does pop, R&B, dance and religious music, and had several hit singles in the 1980s
  • The Jets, a 1970s rock band from Pekin, Illinois
  • Jet Records, a record label

Fiction

  • Jet, a character from Wildstorm/DC Comics, and the daughter of Backlash. Another character by the name of Jet, a female one, exists in DC comics, New Guardians.
  • Jet Black, a main character from the anime Cowboy Bebop.
  • Jet, a character from the Earth Kingdom forests in the TV series Avatar: The Last Airbender
  • The Jets, a gang in West Side Story which fought with the Sharks.
  • JET TV, a television station in the Jadeworld station group
  • Jet the Hawk, a video game character.
  • Jet, a widely used and very famous drug in the Fallout 2 universe.
  • Jet Fusion, a super spy who makes occasional appearances in the cartoon The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius'

Sports

  • New York Jets, a professional American football team in the National Football League
  • Newcastle United Jets, a professional soccer team in the Australian A-League competition
  • Winnipeg Jets, a former professional hockey team in the World Hockey Association and National Hockey League
  • Jet (Diane Youdale) was one of the stars of Gladiators
  • "Jet," or "Jet Terry," nickname of the popular Dallas Maverick and former University of Arizona point guard Jason Terry.
  • Benny "The Jet" Urquidez, A kickboxer, coreographer and actor (Benny Urquidez)

Culture

  • Jet (slang), to leave in a hurry
  • Jet, an African-American themed magazine
  • Jet, a filling station brand of ConocoPhillips
  • A ZX Spectrum clone from Romania.
  • JET, a 1985 flight simulator produced by subLOGIC
  • The JET Programme - The Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme (teaching English)

Places








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