Laboratorio Nacional de Fusión: Difference between revisions

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** Euler (PC cluster, 1152 Xeon cores, 13.8 Tflops)
** Euler (PC cluster, 1152 Xeon cores, 13.8 Tflops)
* [http://www.bsc.es/ The Barcelona Supercomputing Centre]
* [http://www.bsc.es/ The Barcelona Supercomputing Centre]
* [http://www.res.es/ The Spanish Supercomputing Network]
* [http://www.computaex.es/ LUSITANIA]
* [http://www.computaex.es/ LUSITANIA]
* [http://bifi.unizar.es/ BIFI] (at the University of Zaragoza)
* [http://bifi.unizar.es/ BIFI] (at the University of Zaragoza)

Revision as of 11:54, 30 April 2010

The National Fusion Laboratory is part of CIEMAT.

The Laboratory is dedicated to the development of fusion by magnetic confinement as a future energy generation option. Research is mainly centered on the Flexible Heliac TJ-II, and on materials studies.

History

In 1975, a research group is created at the JEN (later to become CIEMAT) to study the subject of fusion. In 1983, the small tokamak TJ-I is taken into operation, followed by the torsatron TJ-IU in 1994, and the flexible heliac TJ-II in 1999.

Organization

Organization and personnel

Projects and research

Computer resources

Due to the large computational needs of the Laboratory, it makes use of both internal and external resources through collaborations:

Collaborations

The Laboratory participates in many international projects and collaborates with other institutions, such as:

Events

The Laboratory has organised many events, among which:

External Links

Website of the Laboratorio Nacional de Fusión

Website of CIEMAT