Producing energy in a sustainable, safe and environmental friendly way is one of the main challenges of our time.
Nuclear Fusion is one of the promising energy sources, but the technology is difficult to master. It could provide endless energy - estimated to be sufficient for about 2 billion years, there is no CO2 produced and no nuclear waste. Fusion reactors are also inherently safe, because the reaction automatically stops when something goes wrong.
Currently Europe, and other countries from all over the world are working together to develop and build nuclear fusion reactors. To predict and optimise the behaviour of nuclear fusion reactions in these machines, a lot of computer calculations are needed. Everyone can now help with solving this problem by donating unused computing time to the EDGeS@Home project. The otherwise wasted computing time can then be used by scientists in Europe to run software called ISDEP designed to do part of these reactor simulations. ISDEP has been ported by the EDGeS project to the EDGeS infrastructure and is used in EDGeS@Home. In this straightforward way, this ‘green’ approach of information technology and computation make the Fusion research itself environmental friendly now.
From: EDGeS