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2026 ANS Annual Conference
May 31–June 3, 2026
Denver, CO|Sheraton Denver
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RIC session focuses on interagency collaboration
Attendees at last week’s 2026 Regulatory Information Conference, hosted by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, saw extensive discussion of new reactor technologies, uprates, fusion, multiunit deployments, supply chain, and much more.
With the industry in a state of rapid evolution, there was much to discuss. Connected to all these topics was one central theme: the ongoing changes at the NRC. With massively shortened timelines, the ADVANCE Act and Executive Order 14300, and new interagency collaboration and authorization pathways in mind, speakers spent much of the RIC exploring what the road ahead looks like for the NRC.
V. S. Belikov, Ya. I. Kolesnichenko
Fusion Science and Technology | Volume 25 | Number 3 | May 1994 | Pages 258-265
Technical Paper | Alpha-Particle Special / Plasma Engineering | doi.org/10.13182/FST94-A30282
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
The distribution function of fast alpha particles in a tokamak plasma near the outer circumference of the torus is obtained. Calculations are carried out for an axisymmetric tokamak for which the alpha-particle banana width is small in comparison with the plasma radius but sufficiently large to provide the presence of trapped alpha particles, produced in the plasma core, in the plasma edge region. It is shown that alpha particles with this distribution function can excite an edge-localized instability of plasma on magnetoacoustic waves with a frequency close to the harmonics of the alpha-particle gyrofrequency. This contributes to an explanation of the superthermal ion-cyclotron emission observed experimentally on the Joint European Torus (JET) and the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR).