| UCLA
Receives $4.8 Million Grant to Support Research in World-Class Plasma
Physics Facility
In
experiments that last a hundred millionth of a second or just slightly
longer, physicists are learning the secrets of plasma - the turbulent,
hot, ionized, gas-like matter that may help us destroy toxic waste
and chemical and biological weapons, and perhaps help generate unlimited
energy through fusion.
UCLA's
Basic Plasma Science Facility has been awarded a $4.8 million grant
by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation
to become the country's first national research facility for scientists
worldwide to study the mysterious properties of plasma. Plasma is
believed to make up more than 99 percent of the visible universe,
including the sun, the stars, galaxies and the vast majority of
the solar system. Plasma is a fourth state of matter, distinct from
solids, liquids and gases, in which electrons have been stripped
away to leave positively charged atoms or molecules.
"This
is the best facility in the world for physicists to conduct controlled
experiments to understand the properties of plasma - research that
could have significant applications for this country," said Tony
Chan, dean of physical sciences in UCLA's College of Letters and
Science. "UCLA will be host to international physicists working
at the forefront of plasma physics."
The
centerpiece of the facility is an enormous machine called the Large
Plasma Device (LAPD), which weighs more than 80 tons.
Walter
Gekelman, UCLA professor of physics and director of the facility,
and five of his colleagues, built the machine - from the sophisticated
electronics and the plasma source to the plumbing and welding -
over three-and-a-half years. The machine is unique in the world,
and allows physicists to create and analyze plasma and plasma waves
of superheated, energized gas.
"Studying
plasma waves in space is like finding one tooth of a dinosaur and
trying to determine what the whole dinosaur looked like," Gekelman
said. "In our machine, we can see the whole dinosaur.
"Much
about plasmas and how they behave is very poorly understood," Gekelman
added. "Our machine will help us understand plasmas. We can make
measurements in tens of thousands of locations, using technology
we have developed over 30 years."
Experiments
using LAPD last as little as a hundred millionth of a second, and
always much less than a one-thousandth of a second, Gekelman said.
Plasmas in space support thousands of waves that may be a hundred
thousand miles long, exist nowhere else in nature, and dictate how
the plasma behaves.
"We
can study these waves in tremendous detail, and are able to scale
them so they fit in our device," Gekelman said.
Gekelman
and his research team will use the facility half the time for research,
and other physicists worldwide will propose experiments to use the
LAPD for the other half. The Westwood facility operates 24 hours
a day.
Plasmas
could have many practical uses, including plasma torches that cut
through steel like butter (which Gekelman used in making LAPD),
weigh no more than a pencil and may eventually be used to destroy
toxic waste; devices that instantly destroy chemical and biological
weapons such as anthrax; improved computer chips; devices into which
garbage can be thrown and recycled; and perhaps for generating a
clean and unlimited supply of energy in the future through fusion
- the energy source of the sun.
"We
are doing pure research on fundamental issues such as understanding
how heat and energy are transported through a plasma, and learning
the structure of plasmas, but the payoff could be tremendous," Gekelman
said. "Understanding these fundamental issues could help enormously
with designing and building better devices, including, perhaps,
a better fusion reactor. Until we understand the fundamental science
of plasma physics, it is like trying to cure a brain disease without
knowing what part of the brain is involved. Transport, for example,
is one of the factors preventing fusion from being a reality. If
scientists understood transport, we could design more efficient
fusion devices."
Hydrogen
bombs are plasma, and after the first hydrogen bomb was exploded,
scientists realized an unlimited supply of energy could be tapped
if we can control fusion, Gekelman noted. Efforts to do so in the
1950s failed, he said, because attempts to force enormous amounts
of energy and enormous magnetic fields into small regions of space
achieved not temperatures and conditions needed for fusion, but
rather a violent, unstable plasma. Plasmas stick to magnetic fields
and ride them like a cowboy on a bronco. The electrically charged
plasma tore itself apart before fusion could occur.
"The
problem," Gekelman said, "was we didn't understand plasma physics,
and to a large extent, we still don't."
Plasmas
are very odd. Remarkably, the temperature in a plasma within a magnetic
field can differ tremendously in different directions.
"Looking
one way from one particular spot, it could be a million degrees,
while looking another way it could be only a thousand," Gekelman
said. "An analogy would be your face is at a million degrees and
your shoulder is freezing."
As
they move through oscillating plasma, superheated and energized
plasma waves can transform themselves and can change the properties
of the plasma. The Earth is too cold for plasmas to exist here naturally.
"Plasmas
start above the Earth's atmosphere; a few hundred miles up, it's
all plasma," Gekelman said. "From then on out, the whole solar system
is filled with plasma."
The
DOE and NSF have initially funded the facility for five years. The
predecessor to this machine was funded by the U.S. Navy. In addition
to the $4.8 million to fund the UCLA national user facility, Gekelman's
research team has been funded $600,000 annually from DOE and the
U.S. Navy to support their own research. Gekelman, who has conducted
research in plasma physics since earning his Ph.D. in 1971, built
several earlier, less sophisticated devices for studying the behavior
of plasmas. Gekelman's team includes research scientists Jim Maggs,
David Leneman and Steve Vincena; technician Marvin Drandell; and
Karen McBride, associate director of the Basic Plasma Science Facility.
In
addition to conducting research and teaching, Gekelman has built
the country's only plasma physics laboratory for high school students,
with funding from another DOE grant. Students from some two dozen
Los Angeles area high schools, with their teachers, conduct plasma
physics experiments in this laboratory. Any high school can participate.
"The
high school students use the same techniques we do, the same software,
and much of the same equipment (but not the new LAPD)," said Gekelman,
who has worked with high school students in his lab for several
years.
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