Why Nuclear fusion is uncontrollable?
Ava Hall
Updated on March 07, 2026
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Accordingly, why is nuclear fusion not possible in laboratory?
Normally, fusion is not possible because the strongly repulsive electrostatic forces between the positively charged nuclei prevent them from getting close enough together to collide and for fusion to occur.
Additionally, why does nuclear fusion occur only at high temperature? Nuclear fusion of hydrogen to form helium occurs naturally in the sun and other stars. It takes place only at extremely high temperatures. That's because a great deal of energy is needed to overcome the force of repulsion between the positively charged nuclei. In the core, temperatures reach millions of degrees Kelvin.
Similarly, you may ask, can fusion reaction be controlled?
The only known way to control a fusion reaction is with an extremely strong and shaped/focused magnetic field. With today's technology we cannot yet make it strong enough. The only known way to control a fusion reaction is with an extremely strong and shaped/focused magnetic field.
Why is fusion better for creating electricity than fission?
Both fission and fusion are nuclear reactions that produce energy, but the applications are not the same. Fission is the splitting of a heavy, unstable nucleus into two lighter nuclei, and fusion is the process where two light nuclei combine together releasing vast amounts of energy.
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