«Along the way, he has mentored outstanding students who have gone on to make striking contributions to theoretical and
computational plasma physics.»
Later in the 1970s, theorists used new analyses and some of the first
computational plasma physics studies to show that the picture was much less bleak than originally thought.
Not exact matches
At the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton
Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), research performed with collaborators from Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Computational Science at the State University of New York at Stony Brook has shown how plasma causes exceptionally strong, microscopic structures known as carbon nanotubes to
Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), research performed with collaborators from Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced
Computational Science at the State University of New York at Stony Brook has shown how
plasma causes exceptionally strong, microscopic structures known as carbon nanotubes to
plasma causes exceptionally strong, microscopic structures known as carbon nanotubes to grow.
Specialism: Accelerators, neutron & light sources, Acoustics, Astronomy, cosmology & space science, Atomic & molecular science, Biophysics & bioengineering,
Computational science & software engineering, Condensed matter, Defence & aerospace, Earth & environmental science, Education & communications, Electronics & semiconductors, Energy & renewables, Engineering & instrumentation, Materials science, Mathematics & statistics, Medical
physics, cancer research & oncology, Metrology & measurement science, Nanotechnology, Neuroscience, Nuclear, fusion & energy, Optics, lasers & photonics, Physical chemistry,
Plasma science & technology, Quantum science & technology, Science policy & patents, Technical sales & commercial
Hammett specializes in
computational and theoretical studies of the complex
physics of
plasma turbulence and has been a fellow of the American Physical Society since 1997.
Created in 2002 by a group of faculty interested in developing an institute in
computational science in collaboration with the Princeton University administration, PICSciE has grown to include membership from most of the engineering and science departments on campus as well as with the Princeton
Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) and the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL).