I've now FINISHED my Physics degree at Imperial College!
As part of the fourth year of my degree, I had to carry out an MSci project. This is a research based project that allows students to work with research groups in the Physics department and carry out real research!
We had to bid for the projects we wanted and since I am heavily involved with and interested in the Plasma Physics Group at Imperial College I decided to opt for a project with the plasma group. I was lucky enough to find a lab partner that was really enthusiastic about plasma physics too (shout out to Danny for being an AMAZING project partner!). I was so excited to start fourth year and get down to the lab for some science-y fun! In the end, my lab partner and I were lucky enough to get the project that would involve working on the mighty MAGPIE machine!
MAGPIE stands for Mega Ampere Generator for Plasma Implosion Experiments. In simple terms, MAGPIE is the LARGEST university-based pulsed power generator! It generates a HUGE surge of current than blows up really thin wires turning them into a plasma. From here, we can try and recreate the conditions of space in the lab. MAGPIE is an absolutely HUGE machine that spans across two floors of the Blackett Laboratory at Imperial College. It is made up of four large capacitor banks which store a huge amount of charge! My MSci project is one of the most unique projects because not many people get to work on MAGPIE and I feel so lucky to have been able to work on mighty MAGPIE! I couldn't wait to get started!
WHY IS MY WORK EXCITING?
A journey into space is
challenging. It requires a big team of trained individuals, large rockets, lots
of fuel and carefully thought-out mathematics and physics. Thus, learning about
the inner processes of the phenomena and bodies in space can be a difficult
task. Venturing out into the depths of our cosmos to collect data is
problematic because of two main reasons: space is vast and the dynamics of
objects in space evolve over timescales many orders of magnitude larger than
the average human lifetime. Consequently, our Universe is most commonly studied
by observing and analysing the light from it. This light has stored information
which can allow us to find out vital data such as the speed of orbiting bodies
and the chemical composition of stars. This was how we discovered the element,
Helium.
Plasma, the fourth state of
matter, makes up 99.999\% of the Universe, therefore, being able to gain useful
information about the dynamics of space-plasmas is vital. Analysing the light
given off by this exciting state of matter does not allow scientists to
understand its dynamics. Consequently, a different method is required.
Scientists can do this by recreating the conditions of space in their
laboratories, a field known as laboratory astrophysics. Researchers at Imperial
College London in the heart of the basement of the Physics Department mimic
large astrophysical events such as supernovae explosions in the MAGPIE
laboratory.
MAGPIE stands for Mega Ampere
Generator for Plasma Implosion Experiments. It is the largest university-based
pulsed power machine or ‘electricity generator’ that delivers a 1-million-amp
current pulse in 240 billionths of a second! This generates a power of about 1
trillion Watts which is more than the average power generated by the UK
National Grid! Using this large current pulse, scientists on MAGPIE can
generate plasmas by sending this current through aluminium wires as thin as
your hair which causes them to vaporise and turn into a plasma. Thereafter, I
can watch the plasma flow around different obstacles.
On MAGPIE, I try to recreate the
scenarios commonly associated with astrophysical jets. These are large, powerful
streams of plasma and radiation that can be found near super massive black
holes. In the same way that a curve of water forms in front of a race boat in
water, a ‘curve of plasma’ known in science as a bow shock forms around the
astrophysical jets due to plasma streaming outwards into space at near light
speed, pushing matter in the vicinity out of the way. An example of a bow shock
forming around an astrophysical jet can be seen below.
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Image displays a bow shock around LL Ori, a young star in the Great Nebula in the Orion constellation. A bow shock formed when the stellar wind collided with the gas in the surrounding area. Photo courtesy of NASA/ESA. |
By watching plasma flow around
different objects, I can reconstruct bow shocks in the MAGPIE experimental
chamber. The main object of interest in my research work is that of
intersecting bow shocks. When two bow shocks interact at a particular critical
angle, they reflect off each other and merge so that another shock, known as a
Mach stem, forms. I am searching for the elusive Mach stem which has never been
observed in the laboratory before. By using scaling laws, I can scale-up my
small, short-lived experiments to large astrophysical scales that are up to 20
orders of magnitude larger! Utterly mind-blowing!
MY WORK IN PICTURES
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Cutting the thin Aluminium wires to size for the wire array (plasma maker) I'm about to make |
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Central experimental chamber in MAGPIE |
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Me and my lab book |
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This is the contraption that holds the wires, that will then vapourise and turn into a plasma in the central experimental chamber in MAGPIE |
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When MAGPIE is charging that red light flashes and sirens go off! |
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Gas pressures! |
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Ear defenders for safety! |
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Making a wire array - that concentration though! |
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MAGPIE! |
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Science always works better when there's a whiteboard involved! |
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My wire array is complete! |
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Optics and vacuum chambers! |
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Gas pressures |
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Check out our glass targets |
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The same targets but now with a different separation |
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Cutting thin aluminium wires for the wire array |
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Sometimes things in science experiments break and you have to fix them - here, I'm fixing a switch |
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MAGPIE experimental chamber in all its glory |
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Glass target |
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Overalls I had to wear when I went inside one of the Marx (capacitor) banks of MAGPIE - it's an oily ordeal |
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When lasers are on, do not enter |
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That BOOM! button is obviously the best button |
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LASERS ARE ON |
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I'm inside a Marx bank! Those weird pipes are (handmade) liquid resistors |
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Wire array and target alignment complete |
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Sometimes things break in science experiments |
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The wire cutting station |
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Flat glass targets |
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Working on MAGPIE can be a messy job! |
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My trainers have been well and truly MAGPIE-ed! #OilyMoly |
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Photoshoot I did for Diverse@Imperial week |
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Women can do physics too! |
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Bird's eye view of a Marx bank |
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Let's fix those switches in the Marx bank - Mission Accepted |
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I'm going in... |
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Optics! |
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Sometimes I make Facebook Live videos and get caught in action :P |
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Sometimes lab work can up your fashion game - ripped jeans are in fashion at the moment, thanks MAGPIE! |
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My poster for Diverse@Imperial week |
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MAGPIE central experimental chamber |
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Bird's eye view of the experimental chamber in MAGPIE |
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'Hopefully I can inspire the younger generation, particularly females, to catch the physics bug just like me!' |
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Photoshoot |
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Photoshoot |
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Trigger and arm! |
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The lid for the experimental chamber is heavy and has it's own crane to lift it up! |
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Data analysis |
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Targets |
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Cutting glass to make some of the targets for an experimental shot - safety goggles because safety always comes first |
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MAGPIE photoshoot |
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I do love experimental physics! |
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That concentration face |
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Filing down wires for my target fabrication |
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A shot has been fired! |
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Reading around the subject/field of research so I can further my knowledge of the research work I am carrying out |
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Data analysis/Report writing |
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MAGPIE is pretty big! |
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Mirrors are super useful for getting lasers to change their direction of propagation/go around corners |
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A wire array that will end up 'blowing up' in an experimental shot when ~ a million |
It's been SO much fun working on MAGPIE and I feel so lucky to have worked on this incredible machine. I'd like to thank Daniel Russell for being an AMAZING lab partner and for putting up with my banter, you're the best Danny! A huge thank you to Prof. Sergey Lebedev, Dr. Guy Burdiak and Dr. Lee Suttle for being amazing supervisors, for passing on their knowledge and expertise. Thanks to Jack Hare, Jack Halliday, Francisco Suzuki-Vidal, Thomas Clayson for being a pleasure to work with and for answering all my MAGPIE questions as well as offering great tea breaks during long hours of work on MAGPIE.
I feel sad that this chapter of my life has come to an end but I am ever grateful for all the amazing experiences I've had during my undergraduate degree - I've learnt so much, met wonderful people and did things that I'd never thought I'd ever do - like going to America! Thank you Imperial College for all you've offered me, it's been a blast!
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I'm going to be at the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition talking about laboratory astrophysics with the Make A Supernova team which is a collaboration between scientists at Imperial College London, the University of Oxford and AWE. You can come along and find out more about my research and that of the other scientists in the team - if you do come don't be afraid to come up to me and ask me lots of questions (or even take a selfie)! I'm more than happy to answer your questions! Save the event in your diary and come to the Royal Society between the 4th and 9th of July and you could make your own MEGA smoke ring at our stand too! Check us out @MakeASupernova on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. If you do come up to our stand, take a picture with our Instagram frame and use the hashtag #MakeASupernova
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