Science and Technology Brazil is in the race for the artificial sun with tokamaks, public research, and a global billion-dollar competition that aims to transform plasma at 100 million degrees into clean, safe, and almost inexhaustible energy for the planet’s future. Caio Aviz 09/05/2026 at 22:25
Science and Technology While more than 50 countries race to create the first “artificial sun,” a nuclear fusion technology that requires plasma at over 100 million degrees and promises nearly inexhaustible clean energy with fuel from seawater, Brazil tries to enter the game with the only tokamak in operation in the Southern Hemisphere. Ana Alice 09/05/2026 at 22:00
Science and Technology China’s “Artificial Sun” Reaches 100 Million Degrees for 1,066 Seconds, A World Record That Changes the Future of Clean Energy Carla Teles 13/09/2025 at 14:10
Science and Technology Why Gates, Nvidia, and Google Are Investing $863 Million in CFS’s Nuclear Fusion and What It Means for Energy in the AI Era Geovane Souza 30/08/2025 at 10:20