Skip to main content
Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences and Engineering
CEMSE
Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences and Engineering
Home
Study
Prospective Students
Current Students
Internships
Research
Research Overview
Research Areas
Research Groups
Programs
Applied Mathematics and Computational Sciences
Computer Science
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Statistics
People
All People
Faculty
Affiliate Faculty
Instructional Faculty
Research Scientists
Research Staff
Postdoctoral Fellows
Students
Alumni
Administrative Staff
News
Events
About
Who We Are
Message from the Dean
Leadership Team
Apply
nuclear fission
Solving the grandest of challenges
1 min read ·
Tue, Oct 30 2018
News
energy
nuclear fission
ITER
KAUST
Around the world, scientists, researchers and engineers seek to develop sustainable alternatives to the burning of fossil fuels. Some explore the kinetic energy of wind, gravity or water. Others capture excited electrons using photosensitive materials. William Tang, a principal research physicist at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory at Princeton University, wants to power the world using the chemical reaction that stars run on—nuclear fusion—and he believes deep learning is a key.