Thomas A. Leonard in the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, North Campus, August 1968 Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 8, 1968
Caption:
Gas Ionized A blinding flash turns the transparent ports white (right) as Thomas A. Leonard of Ann Arbor, a U-M doctoral candidate, presses button to vaporize a lithium wire. The resulting gas is ionized by an electrical discharge to generate a hot, high-density plasma. Scattered laser light is measured to provide information about plasma temperature and density. Leonard carries out his experiment in the Fluids Engineering building on North Campus.
Ann Arbor News, September 8, 1968
Caption:
Gas Ionized A blinding flash turns the transparent ports white (right) as Thomas A. Leonard of Ann Arbor, a U-M doctoral candidate, presses button to vaporize a lithium wire. The resulting gas is ionized by an electrical discharge to generate a hot, high-density plasma. Scattered laser light is measured to provide information about plasma temperature and density. Leonard carries out his experiment in the Fluids Engineering building on North Campus.
Copyright
Copyright Protected