There can be no doubt that plasmas matter. More than 99% of material in the universe is ionized; on Earth, plasmas are used to produce most of our artificial light, they are essential to the semiconductor manufacturing industry and they are at the heart of the quest for commercial energy from nuclear fusion.
Plasmas are ionized gases in which long-range electrical and magnetic interactions involving charged particles dominate over collisions between neutral species. Wide ranges of particle energies and particle densities are involved: from the tenuous interstellar medium to dense ablation plumes around the focal spots of high power, short-pulse lasers; from around a hundred million kelvin associated with nuclear fusion reactions to a few thousand kelvin in maintaining the electrical conduction in gases. Plasma Physics embraces all of these.
Specific research areas include the following:
The Plasma Physics Group was formed in 1968, since when it has been actively promoting the study of plasmas throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland. It provides a forum for the exchange of ideas and initiatives across the broad range of plasmas in science and engineering. The Group awards student bursaries to facilitate attendance at its annual conference and other plasma related meetings including the UK Plasma Technology Training School. In conjunction with the UKAEA the Group each year offers a prize for the best thesis in plasma physics submitted at a UK or Irish university.
The activities of the Group are co-ordinated on matters of common interest with the Division of Atomic, Molecular, Optical and Plasma Physics, the Surface Science and Technology Division and other learned or professional bodies such as the Royal Astronomical Society and the S3 Group of the IEE.
Annual Conference
The Plasma Physics Conference, held under the auspices of the Institute of Physics, is wide-ranging, covering all aspects of plasma physics:-
Fusion research (magnetic and inertial confinement)
Solar and planetary plasmas
Technological Plasmas - (Dusty plasmas, Processing plasmas, Novel plasma devices, Control & monitoring of plasma parameters)
Laser-plasma interactions
Plasma diagnostics.
The pages for the Group are currently being transferred to the new Institute of Physics website. Until this process is complete the original pages for the Group can be accessed here.
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