PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Finding the shadows in a fusion system faster with AI

New AI approach speeds up calculations vital to protecting the inside of fusion vessels from the intense heat of the plasma

2025-08-13
(Press-News.org) A public-private partnership between Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS), the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) and Oak Ridge National Laboratory has led to a new artificial intelligence (AI) approach that is faster at finding what’s known as “magnetic shadows” in a fusion vessel: safe havens protected from the intense heat of the plasma. 

Known as HEAT-ML, the new AI could lay the foundation for software that significantly speeds up the design of future fusion systems. Such software could also enable good decision-making during fusion operations by adjusting the plasma so that potential problems are thwarted before they start. 

“This research shows that you can take an existing code and create an AI surrogate that will speed up your ability to get useful answers, and it opens up interesting avenues in terms of control and scenario planning,” said Michael Churchill, co-author of a paper in Fusion Engineering and Design about HEAT-ML and head of digital engineering at PPPL.

Fusion, the reaction that fuels the sun and stars, could provide potentially limitless amounts of electricity on Earth. To harness it, researchers need to overcome key scientific and engineering challenges. One such challenge is handling the intense heat coming from the plasma, which reaches temperatures hotter than the sun’s core when confined using magnetic fields in a fusion vessel known as a tokamak. Speeding up the calculations that predict where this heat will hit and what parts of the tokamak will be safe in the shadows of other parts is key to bringing fusion power to the grid.

“The plasma-facing components of the tokamak might come in contact with the plasma, which is very hot and can melt or damage these elements,” said Doménica Corona Rivera, an associate research physicist at PPPL and first author on the paper on HEAT-ML. “The worst thing that can happen is that you would have to stop operations.”

PPPL amplifies its impact through public-private partnership
HEAT-ML was specifically made to simulate a small part of SPARC: a tokamak currently under construction by CFS. The Massachusetts company hopes to demonstrate net energy gain by 2027, meaning SPARC would generate more energy than it consumes. 

Simulating how heat impacts SPARC’s interior is central to this goal and a big computing challenge. To break down the challenge into something manageable, the team focused on a section of SPARC where the most intense plasma heat exhaust intersects with the material wall. This particular part of the tokamak, representing 15 tiles near the bottom of the machine, is the part of the machine’s exhaust system that will be subjected to the most heat.

To create such a simulation, researchers generate what they call shadow masks. Shadow masks are 3D maps of magnetic shadows, which are specific areas on the surfaces of a fusion system’s internal components that are shielded from direct heat. The location of these shadows depends on the shape of the parts inside the tokamak and how they interact with the magnetic field lines that confine the plasma. 

Creating simulations to optimize the way fusion systems operate
Originally, an open-source computer program called HEAT, or the Heat flux Engineering Analysis Toolkit, calculated these shadow masks. HEAT was created by CFS Manager Tom Looby during his doctoral work with Matt Reinke, now leader of the SPARC Diagnostic Team, and was first applied on the exhaust system for PPPL’s National Spherical Torus Experiment-Upgrade machine. 

HEAT-ML traces magnetic field lines from the surface of a component to see if the line intersects other internal parts of the tokamak. If it does, that region is marked as “shadowed.” However, tracing these lines and finding where they intersect the detailed 3D machine geometry was a significant bottleneck in the process. It could take around 30 minutes for a single simulation and even longer for some complex geometries.

HEAT-ML overcomes this bottleneck, accelerating the calculations to a few milliseconds. It uses a deep neural network: a type of AI that has hidden layers of mathematical operations and parameters that it applies to the data to learn how to do a specific task by looking for patterns. HEAT-ML’s deep neural network was trained using a database of approximately 1,000 SPARC simulations from HEAT to learn how to calculate shadow masks. 

HEAT-ML is currently tied to the specific design of SPARC’s exhaust system; it only works for that small part of that particular tokamak and is an optional setting in the HEAT code. However, the research team hopes to expand its capabilities to generalize the calculation of shadow masks for exhaust systems of any shape and size, as well as the rest of the plasma-facing components inside a tokamak.

DOE supported this work under contracts DE-AC02-09CH11466 and DE-AC05-00OR22725, and it also received support from CFS.

PPPL is mastering the art of using plasma — the fourth state of matter — to solve some of the world’s toughest science and technology challenges. Nestled on Princeton University’s Forrestal Campus in Plainsboro, New Jersey, our research ignites innovation in a range of applications, including fusion energy, nanoscale fabrication, quantum materials and devices, and sustainability science. The University manages the Laboratory for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science, which is the nation’s single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences. Feel the heat at https://energy.gov/science and http://www.pppl.gov.  

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Weekend habits linked to new sleep disorder trend: ‘Social Apnea’

2025-08-13
Late nights, alcohol, and smoking on weekends may be doing more than disrupting your Monday mornings, they could be triggering a newly identified sleep health concern known as ‘social apnea’, warn researchers from Flinders University. Published in the prestigious American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, the international study introduces social apnea as a novel trend in sleep medicine referring to the weekend spike in Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) severity, driven by lifestyle choices and irregular sleep patterns. The research, which analysed data from over 70,000 people worldwide, found a consistent ...

FAU lands $700,000 U.S. EPA grant to monitor water quality in Lake Okeechobee

2025-08-13
Florida Atlantic University’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Science has been awarded a $700,000 grant from the United States Environmental Protection Agency Gulf of America Division to support a novel research project aimed at advancing water quality monitoring in one of Florida’s most critical freshwater ecosystems. Led by Natalia Malina, Ph.D., principal investigator and an assistant professor in FAU’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry within the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, the three-year project titled, “Developing ...

WSU team unlocks biological process underlying coho die-offs

2025-08-13
For years, scientists at Washington State University’s Puyallup Research & Extension Center have been working to untangle a mystery: Why do coho salmon in Puget Sound creeks seem to suffocate after rainstorms—rising to the surface, gaping, and swimming in circles before dying? In 2018, the die-offs were linked to bits of car tires shed by friction and washed into the stormwater runoff. In 2020, researchers zeroed in on one particular chemical culprit, a tire preservative known as 6PPD.   Now, research led by WSU PhD student Stephanie ...

Chungnam National University researchers develop next-gen zinc batteries: artificial polymer nanolayers improve zinc battery stability

2025-08-13
Aqueous zinc-ion batteries (ZIBs) are gaining attention as a safer and more affordable alternative to lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). While LIBs remain the most widely used energy storage technology, they come with safety risks due to their reliance on flammable organic electrolytes. In contrast, aqueous ZIBs use water-based electrolytes, making them non-flammable, environment friendly, and more affordable. Unfortunately, during charging and discharging, zinc-anodes in ZIBs undergo repeated plating and stripping that can trigger undesirable side reactions and sharp dendrite formation. This severely impacts their ...

$500 million fundraising goal surpassed by The University of Texas at San Antonio two years early

2025-08-13
The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) announced today that it has exceeded the university’s goal of raising more than $500 million through its largest fundraising effort in university history, Be Bold: A Campaign for Our Future. The ambitious campaign aimed to accelerate student success, advance research excellence and expand the university’s community impact. First conceived in 2017 and set to run for 10 years alongside the university’s strategic plan, the Be Bold campaign garnered support from more than 60,000 ...

Illinois team updates state threatened, endangered plant species rankings

2025-08-13
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Scientists from the Illinois Natural History Survey and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources have updated the state conservation status ranks, or S-ranks, of threatened and endangered plants in Illinois. The update includes some plants not recorded in the state for decades and finds many that, while still threatened, are doing better than previously thought. Their findings are detailed in the Natural Areas Journal. The 331 plants on the list are as fascinating as they are rare, said Brian Charles, an INHS scientific specialist in botany who led the multiyear effort. They include ...

AASM is accepting abstracts and award entries for Sleep Medicine Disruptors 2025

2025-08-13
DARIEN, IL – The American Academy of Sleep Medicine is accepting abstracts and innovation award entries as part of Sleep Medicine Disruptors 2025, which will be held in-person in Austin, Texas, and livestreamed Friday and Saturday, Nov. 14-15.  This biennial event attracts clinicians, scientists, technology developers, start-up founders, venture capitalists, and other health care innovators. Speakers will explore technology innovation, artificial intelligence, and other disruptions that are poised to change the landscape of sleep health, patient care, and health care delivery. ...

Researchers re-engineer AI language model to target previously ‘undruggable’ disease proteins

2025-08-13
Hamilton, ON (August 13, 2025) --- A study published in Nature Biotechnology reveals a powerful new use for artificial intelligence: designing small, drug-like molecules that can stick to and break down harmful proteins in the body — even when scientists don’t know what those proteins look like. The breakthrough could lead to new treatments for diseases that have long resisted traditional drug development, including certain cancers, brain disorders, and viral infections. The study was published on August 13, 2025 by a multi-institutional team of researchers from McMaster University, Duke University, and Cornell University. The AI tool, called PepMLM, ...

Gaia’s variable stars: a new map of the stellar life cycle

2025-08-13
One of the best places to study stars is inside “open clusters”, which are groups of stars that formed together from the same material and are bound together through gravity. Open clusters act as laboratories, showing how stars of different masses and ages behave. At the same time, some stars known as “variable stars”, regularly change in brightness, and  their flickers and pulses help scientists learn about the physics inside stars and about the wider galaxy. Until now, astronomers studied clusters and variable stars separately, and ...

AI web browser assistants raise serious privacy concerns

2025-08-13
Popular generative AI web browser assistants are collecting and sharing sensitive user data, such as medical records and social security numbers, without adequate safeguards, finds a new study led by researchers from UCL and Mediterranea University of ​​Reggio Calabria. The study, which will be presented and published as part of the USENIX Security Symposium, is the first large-scale analysis of generative AI browser assistants and privacy. It uncovered widespread tracking, profiling, and personalisation ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

‘Revolutionary’ seafloor fiber sensing reveals how falling ice drives glacial retreat in Greenland

Two-dose therapy for S. aureus bloodstream infections on par with standard treatment

Quitting smoking is associated with recovery from other addictions

Overhaul global food systems to avert worsening land crisis: Scientists

ASU scientists uncover new fossils – and a new species of ancient human ancestor

Would you like that coffee with iron?

County-level cervical cancer screening coverage and differences in incidence and mortality

Gauging the magnitude of missed opportunity for ovarian cancer prevention

Counties with low rates of cervical cancer screening see higher rates of incidence and death

Years after an earthquake, rivers still carry the mountains downstream

Discovery of new fossils — and a new species of ancient human ancestor — reveals insights on evolution

Falling ice drives glacial retreat in Greenland

UMass Amherst-led team finds rapidly changing river patterns in High-mountain Asia pose a challenge for region’s energy future

New compound disrupts survival pathways in aromatase inhibitor-resistant breast cancer cells

Arabic and Czech translations, more than 4,000 new concepts boost global interoperability in latest LOINC® release

New treatment eliminates bladder cancer in 82% of patients

Finding the shadows in a fusion system faster with AI

Weekend habits linked to new sleep disorder trend: ‘Social Apnea’

FAU lands $700,000 U.S. EPA grant to monitor water quality in Lake Okeechobee

WSU team unlocks biological process underlying coho die-offs

Chungnam National University researchers develop next-gen zinc batteries: artificial polymer nanolayers improve zinc battery stability

$500 million fundraising goal surpassed by The University of Texas at San Antonio two years early

Illinois team updates state threatened, endangered plant species rankings

AASM is accepting abstracts and award entries for Sleep Medicine Disruptors 2025

Researchers re-engineer AI language model to target previously ‘undruggable’ disease proteins

Gaia’s variable stars: a new map of the stellar life cycle

AI web browser assistants raise serious privacy concerns

AI-enhanced infrared thermography for reliable detection of temperature patterns in calves

Now you see me, now you don’t: how subtle ‘sponsored content’ on social media tricks us into viewing ads

New method loads mRNA into exosomes in 10 minutes—just mix and go

[Press-News.org] Finding the shadows in a fusion system faster with AI
New AI approach speeds up calculations vital to protecting the inside of fusion vessels from the intense heat of the plasma