Fuel confinement
Gravitational confinement
All mass, and energy in general, creates a gravitational force. One way to hold the fuel together long enough to undergo fusion is to put enough of it in one place that the gravity created by the fuel is enough to hold it together, as in stars. Stars are self-regulating, the force holding the star out against its own gravity is the heat being generated by the fusion inside. Thus if the rate of fusion rises, the star expands and the rate slows. Some simple math can demonstrate that the mass of fuel needed to make a star using the D-D reaction is about the size of the Moon.
Inertial confinement
The fuel can be explosively compressed with external photons or other particles. Of course with an explosive, this implies that the containment time will tend to be quite small. However if the compression is high enough this is of little concern, as the fuel will still undergo significant fusion. This is the process used in the hydrogen bomb, where a huge explosion, provided by a nuclear fission bomb, compresses a small cylinder of fusion fuel.
In a thermonuclear weapon the x-rays generated by a fission device "boils" a plastic foam, creating a shock wave that is focused onto a "trigger" cylinder containing a liquid D-T mix. Other forms of inertial confinement have been attempted for fusion power, including using large lasers focused on a small pellet of fuel, or using ions of the fuel itself accelerated into a central region as in the Farnsworth-Hirsch Fusor.
Magnetic confinement
A plasma consists of charged particles which can then be confined with appropriate magnetic fields.
A variety of magnetic fields can be used to confine and insulate a fusion plasma. However, the confined plasma interacts with
different confining magnetic fields in ways that affect the heating and confinement efficiency of the system. The nature of the fusion reactor will also be profoundly
affected by the particular magnetic configuration.
There are only two basic magnetic structures which have been shown to confine plasmas of fusion interest: the magnetic mirror
and the magnetic torus. However, each of these magnetic confinement systems has several variations. These confinement systems
differ in practice by emphasizing particular principles of fusion science to improve plasma confinement or to simplify the technical
requirements for producing the magnetic fields. Historically, the tokamak, a toroidal confinement concept, embodied a set of principles which was comparatively easy to implement in the laboratory. As a result, most of the scientific progress has been made
with this concept.
Fusion as a power source
For many years, considerable theoretical and experimental effort has gone into tapping fusion power, initially for electricity generation and possibly as an extremely efficient spacecraft propulsion system. See fusion power for an extensive discussion.