AbstractThe Quantum-Distributed Metastable Control Architecture for the Linear Fusion Magnetic MirrorReactor (LFMR-Q) was initially proposed as an experimental pathway toward active metastableconfinement in linear magnetic mirror systems. While the feasibility of economically viable fusionignition remains uncertain, the architecture may nonetheless possess substantial scientific value as anadvanced plasma research platform.This paper presents a critical and objective reassessment of the LFMR-Q concept. Rather than framingthe system exclusively as a reactor proposal, we investigate its potential role as a cybernetic plasmaobservatory integrating ultrafast diagnostics, AI-assisted control, high-field superconducting systems,and distributed computational infrastructure.The work argues that even without net fusion gain, such an experimental platform could contributesignificantly to:• nonlinear plasma dynamics,• metastability research,• real-time control theory,• ultrafast measurement science,• AI-assisted physics,• and complex systems experimentation.The paper also discusses the speculative aspects of the original architecture, including the limitations ofquantum communication in practical plasma control.
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Jean-yves Lozac'h
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Jean-yves Lozac'h (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a002191c8f74e3340f9c73e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20090731