Cadesimu Linux ((free)) Info
He loaded the result in (the open-source visualization software, running natively on Linux). The screen filled with a swirling, toroidal rainbow of magnetic flux lines. They were stable. Confined. Perfect.
> sim = cadesimu.attach("resonator_mk7") > print(sim.mesh.quality.min_angle) 12.4 > field = sim.get_field("magnetic_b", 1500, 0, 0) > print(field.tensor) [ [4.2, 1.1, 0.0], [1.1, 12.4, 0.0], [0.0, 0.0, 0.3] ] The tensor wasn't symmetric. That meant the magnetic field was tearing itself apart. A physical impossibility in a vacuum, but a mathematical certainty in Cadesimu's finite-element solver. He had a mesh singularity at coordinate (1500,0,0). cadesimu linux
He didn't hit Enter yet. Instead, he leaned back in his Herman Miller chair, the creak echoing like a gunshot. The Resonator Mk7 was his life’s work: a magnetic confinement ring for a experimental fusion cell. If the simulation passed, they built the prototype. If it failed, the company went bankrupt. No pressure. He loaded the result in (the open-source visualization
"No," he whispered.