As stated in the NRC report from the Burning
Plasma Assessment Committee in the quote above, one of the major
issues facing the fusion program is the aging of the community.
Clearly the fusion program must train a new generation of young
researchers in order to maintain the current rate of progress.
Similarly, the Center's ambitious scientific program requires an
exceptional team of young researchers with a deep understanding of
fusion physics. To meet our need (and part of the community's need),
CMPD sponsors advanced education program in fusion science and
plasma physics. The aim of this program is to bridge the gap between
the standard graduate courses in plasma physics and the frontiers of
research. The education program has three elements.
- Advanced Courses Throughout the year, advanced courses
are taught at Maryland and UCLA. The courses will be available
via video conferencing to both center sites and to the fusion
community. Although the curriculum may vary, we envisage several core
courses to build on existing courses at the center sites.
- Advanced Plasma Confinement Theory Theory of
equilibrium, stability, heating and transport in magnetically confined
devices. Team taught. Lecturers may include: Drake, Dorland,
Leboeuf, Morales, Hassam, Peebles, Cowley, etc.
- Advanced Kinetic Theory Drift-Kinetics, gyrokinetics,
closures, wave-particle interaction, quasi-linear theory. Team
taught. Lecturers may include: Antonsen, Dorland, Hammett, Morales,
Drake, etc.
- Plasma Simulation PIC methods, continuum models,
parallel methods, Fluid and MHD methods. Team taught. Lecturers may
include: Decyck, Dorland, Leboeuf, Antonsen, Glasser, Mori.
- Experimental Methods Modern diagnostics from probes to
scattering. Team taught. Lecturers may include: Gekelman, Carter,
Peebles, etc.
We invite lecturers from outside our institutions to participate in
this program. Many of the modern developments in plasma and fusion
science are missing from current textbooks. The CMPD will support
publication of high quality lecture notes and textbooks to help
address this issue.
- Winter School The center runs an intensive three- to
four-week winter school. The first school (January, 2005) will be
hosted by the Institute for Pure and
Applied Mathematics, together with a one-week
workshop on multiscale fusion physics. Lecturers will be drawn from the
community. Again, this school is aimed at the advanced graduate
student and post-doc level. The curriculum will be
focused on physics issues and current research. Extensive notes and
resources will be provided for the participants and we expect that
this will stimulate the writing of advanced texts by lecturers. Each
day will end with problem solving sessions run by the students. One
of the purposes of the school is to build connections and a sense of
community among the younger generation of fusion researchers and
plasma scientists. This provides a benefit to the whole community
that is less quantifiable than the direct scientific benefits but
nonetheless real. We will the school in the winter because
summers are already dominated by conferences. The school will accept
up to forty participants from throughout the fusion community and the
center will provide travel grants and accommodation based on the need
and suitability of the participant.
- Weekly Seminars Beginning in the Fall of 2004, CMPD will
run a weekly seminar shared between sites over the web. This will be
the central unifying event of the week for the two sites and it will
involve various presentations such as speakers from outside the
center, reports on the progress of Center projects by a post-doc or
graduate student, and a discussion. Graduate students and
post-doctoral fellows of the Center that have inter-institutional
research projects will be funded to visit appropriately for extended
periods.
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