The Heretics Who Made Fusion Small
For decades, plasma physicists dismissed electrostatic fusion as fundamentally impossible. The math was brutal: space-charge limits, Coulomb collisions, draining energy 25x faster than fusion releases it.

Building a small fusion reactor this way violated basic principles.

And yet—Avalanche Energy just achieved plasma densities 40x higher than targets, using a device small enough to fit in a pickup truck.
How?

April 2025: Rotating mode instability threatened the entire project. The CEO remembered PhD work on turbulence re-laminarization. Plasma physicist recalled Soviet PSP-2 experiments from the 1980s.

They combined fluid dynamics + forgotten fusion research into the "Jin" experiment: pulsed voltage creating rotational shear.

Instability vanished. Density shot to 4×10¹² particles/cm³.

The philosophy:
• Fail Monday
→ Rebuild Friday
→ Test next Monday
• Cross disciplinary boundaries freely
• Mine forgotten archives
• Machine learning for 98.2% prediction accuracy
• Trust data over doctrine

The lesson:
What "impossible" problems in your field stopped being investigated because expert consensus closed the case? What could you unlock if you questioned fundamental limits as rigorously as you accept them?
Sometimes heresy is just premature truth waiting for desperate people willing to test it.

Full deep dive:

🎧 Listen: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2405788/episodes/18064267

đź“– Read: https://helioxpodcast.substack.com/p/the-heretics-who-made-fusion-small

Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy 🇨🇦

#FusionEnergy #NuclearFusion #CleanEnergy #ClimateScience #RenewableEnergy #SciComm #Physics #Engineering #Innovation #CleanTech #EnergyResearch #Orbitron

💡The Heretics Who Made Fusion Small: What Avalanche Energy Teaches Us About Impossible Problems - Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy 🇨🇦‬

Please see the corresponding Substack episodeWhen the orthodoxy says “it can’t be done,” someone inevitably proves them wrong—but only if they’re willing to fail fast, think sideways, and trust the data over doctrine.There’s a peculiar comfort in ...

Buzzsprout