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The world's most powerful laser

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New York Times: The $3.5 billion National Ignition Facility, which houses the world's most powerful laser, as well as the largest optical instrument ever built, will be officially opened on Friday.

NIF lasers (credit: LLNL)The project's director, Ed Moses, said that getting to the cusp of ignition (defined as the successful achievement of fusion) had taken some 7,000 workers and 3,000 contractors a dozen years, their labors creating a precision colossus of millions of parts and 60,000 points of control, 30 times as many as on the space shuttle.

In February, NIF test fired the192 lasers--made of nearly 60 miles of mirrors and fiber optics, crystals and light amplifiers--into its target chamber. Inside the chamber a small fleck of hydrogen fuel, smaller than a match head, was pulverized for the first time.

Compressed and heated to temperatures hotter than those of the core of a star, the hydrogen atoms will fuse into helium, releasing bursts of thermonuclear energy.

But raising its energies still further to the point of ignition could take a year or more of experimentation and might, officials concede, prove daunting and perhaps impossible.

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