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Newly-single Love Island hunk reunites with bombshell ex-girlfriend as they’re spotted on coffee date
A NEWLY-SINGLE Love Island hunk has been spotted on a date with his bombshell ex – just weeks after splitting from his girlfriend.
Ciaran Davies and Nicole Samuel made it to the Love Island final during last summer’s series.
But their villa romance was rocked when Casa Amor bombshell Ellie Jackson arrived and revealed she and Ciaran had been messaging on the outside.
Ciaran later claimed he and Ellie had met briefly on a night out before Love Island.
But The Sun can reveal that, following his shock split from Nicole last month, he and Ellie have reconnected.
An insider told us: “They have recently refollowed each other on Instagram and have been getting to know each other on a more romantic level since his split with Nicole.
“They have been spotted around his local town of Bridgend together and looked cosy as they grabbed a coffee.”
And it seems that Nicole is also ready to move on from her relationship with Ciaran.
The Sun told last week how All Stars bosses approached Nicole to enter the villa as a last-minute bombshell – and she was considering it.
A source said: “She doesn’t have long to decide and is still unsure about it but is heavily considering it, given the amount of people she knows in the villa and the fact she’s newly-single.”
Nicole and Ciaran’s split blindsided fans as it came just weeks after she opened up about starting a family with him.
She told heat: “If I didn’t think we were going to get married and have babies one day, we wouldn’t be together, so I’d say that’s definitely on the cards in the future. Ci would be an amazing dad.”
But a rep for the pair told us last month: “Over the last couple of days Nicole and Ciaran have made the mutual decision to part ways.
“They have left the relationship on amicable terms, and will remain good friends going forward.”
Is THIS where the world’s first ‘artificial Sun’ will be born? Vast Chinese fusion facility may also have deadly purpose
A NEW Chinese fusion facility may be where the world’s first “artificial sun” is born – but could also be used to develop deadly nuclear weapons.
Experts have said a huge laser fusion research centre is being built in the southwestern city of Mianyang that could have different uses.
A satellite photo shows the laser fusion centre in Mianyang, China[/caption] The fully superconducting Tokamak Device (EAST) at the Hefei Institute of Physical Science, China[/caption] Physicists congratulate each other after sustaining a plasma loop for 1,066 seconds[/caption]The lab will be even bigger than the US’s National Ignition Facility (NIF) in Northern Carolina.
Satellite images show four “arms” of the building sticking out that will be home to laser bays, and a central chamber where hydrogen will fuse together.
William Alberque, a nuclear policy analyst, said: “Any country with an NIF-type facility can and probably will be increasing their confidence and improving existing weapons designs, and facilitating the design of future bomb designs without testing.”
In November 2020, US arms official Marshall Billingslea released satellite images he said showed China’s build-up of nuclear weapons support facilities.
It included images of a cleared plot of land in Mianyang labelled “new research or production areas since 2010”.
That plot is the same site as the fusion research centre, called the Laser Fusion Major Device Laboratory, according to Reuters.
China has also been trying to build an “artificial sun” that would be a source of unlimited energy for the Earth.
It would require a highly-specialised facility, and that could be what this new lab in Mianyang is destined for.
Scientists achieved a breakthrough last week when they sustained a plasma temperature of more than 100 million degrees for 1,066 seconds – almost 18 minutes – smashing the previous record of 403 seconds.
This major leap happened in the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak reactor in Hefei, eastern China.
The physicists used a system designed to mimic the fusion reactions at the core of the sun by using hydrogen and deuterium gases as fuel.
They say that to make nuclear fusion a viable source of energy on Earth we will need sustained plasma temperatures hotter than the sun.
The temperature at the core of the sun is estimated to be around 15 million degrees Celsius.
Song Yuntao, EAST’s director, said: “To achieve self-sustaining plasma and enable fusion power plants to generate electricity continuously, a fusion device must operate highly efficiently in a stable state for thousands of seconds.”
Building a reactor capable of handling sustained nuclear fusion is an enormous challenge for scientists.
It would need super-fortified walls made of special materials that can survive out-of-this-world conditions, South China Morning Post reports.
Zhou Haishan, a professor at Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, said: “Developing wall materials that are both resilient and resistant to damage is extremely difficult.
“To test such materials, we need advanced simulation environments.”
What is nuclear fusion?
NUCLEAR fusion is the process when two atomic nuclei combine to form a single heavier one.
This process causes the release of a massive amounts of energy.
Fusion reactions happen when matter is in a state called plasma.
This is hot, charged gas made of positive ions and free-moving electrons – and is different from from solids, liquids or gases.
The sun, along with all other stars, is powered by this reaction.
To fuse inside the sun sun, nuclei need to collide with each other at extremely high temperatures – around ten million degrees Celsius.
The high temperature provides them with enough energy to overcome the electrical repulsion between them.
When the nuclei get very close to each other, the attractive nuclear force between them will outweigh the electrical repulsion and allow them to fuse.
For this to happen, the nuclei must also be confined within a small space to increase the chances of collision.
In the sun, the extreme pressure produced by its immense gravity creates the conditions for fusion to happen.
Scientists have also managed to create the conditions to allow nuclear fusion on earth.