A paper on fusion neutron sources by a team from the United States of America’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the University of Rochester has won the IAEA’s annual Nuclear Fusion prize. The article describes critical successes in producing output from fusion in the form of neutrons.
The Nuclear Fusion prize is given annually to recognize outstanding work issued in the IAEA journal, Nuclear Fusion. Each year, a shortlist of ten papers is nominated. These are papers of the highest scientific standard, published in the journal volume three years previous to the award year. Nominations are based on citation record and recommendation by the Board of Editors. The Board then votes to determine which of these papers has made the largest scientific impact.
“Shooting really big lasers at stuff can stimulate fusion reactions like those occurring in the sun and other stars,” said Charles B. Yeamans, the paper’s first author and winner of the prize.