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In this episode of the Kronos Fusion Energy Podcast, Philippe Lebrun joins Priyanca Ford to discuss cryogenics, superconducting magnets, and particle accelerator technology—and how these systems quietly underpin modern science and energy research.
With more than four decades at CERN, Philippe played a foundational role in the development and industrialization of superconducting accelerator systems, including those that enabled the Large Hadron Collider. The conversation explores why cryogenics is essential for high magnetic fields, why room-temperature superconductors remain elusive, and how accelerator technologies extend far beyond fundamental research into industry, medicine, nuclear energy, and fusion.
As an Audit Committee Member at Kronos Fusion Energy, Philippe brings a systems-level perspective on reliability, validation, and long-horizon technical risk—offering insight into what it takes to translate advanced physics into dependable, real-world energy systems.
This episode offers a rare, systems-level view of how superconductivity, accelerators, and cryogenics quietly enable much of modern science and energy research—and why these technologies remain central to the future of fusion energy.
By Priyanca FordIn this episode of the Kronos Fusion Energy Podcast, Philippe Lebrun joins Priyanca Ford to discuss cryogenics, superconducting magnets, and particle accelerator technology—and how these systems quietly underpin modern science and energy research.
With more than four decades at CERN, Philippe played a foundational role in the development and industrialization of superconducting accelerator systems, including those that enabled the Large Hadron Collider. The conversation explores why cryogenics is essential for high magnetic fields, why room-temperature superconductors remain elusive, and how accelerator technologies extend far beyond fundamental research into industry, medicine, nuclear energy, and fusion.
As an Audit Committee Member at Kronos Fusion Energy, Philippe brings a systems-level perspective on reliability, validation, and long-horizon technical risk—offering insight into what it takes to translate advanced physics into dependable, real-world energy systems.
This episode offers a rare, systems-level view of how superconductivity, accelerators, and cryogenics quietly enable much of modern science and energy research—and why these technologies remain central to the future of fusion energy.