A major fusion energy announcement came out of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California today. Scientists at the facility were able to initiate a fusion experiment that produced more energy than was required for its ignition, aiming 192 laser beams recreating the energy of the sun at each end of a tiny cylinder containing a spherical chunk of hydrogen fuel encased in diamond. This constituted a fairly typical fusion experiment, one conducted “hundreds” of times prior. The difference in the experiment conducted December 5, 2022? The scientists were able to keep the spherical fusion fuel “hot enough, dense enough, round enough, for long enough” that it ignited, producing “more energies than the lasers deposited.” So, what does this huge scientific breakthrough mean for cars? Will you see fusion energy replace coal, wind, or nuclear power plants anytime soon? A lot of people resist electric cars because our power grid isn’t green enough, with 60 percent of our electricity generated by fossil fuels. Read original article here.
Chip shortage strikes again: Toyota production takes another hit
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Toyota, Lexus lead tougher Top Safety Pick awards
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Have lithium-ion battery capabilities peaked?
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David Suzuki chats about his trip from Vancouver to Toronto in an EV
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Large infotainment screens a huge distraction, says Swedish study
Screens are all the rage in automotive interior design these days. From the vertically mounted, foot-long vertical tablets you see in Teslas and Ram trucks to the horizontal screens optioned by BMW and Chevrolet, it’s hard to avoid a touchscreen …
Solar-powered EVs for your daily commute?
Sono Motors might be onto something. The idea is that if a solar-powered electric vehicle can recharge its battery via the sun equal to a driver’s average commute time, the driver will never have to worry about range anxiety creeping …