TOP >> UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY >> Plasma physics
 
Browse Institutions
You are viewing titles for UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY in the Plasma physics available through the UMI Dissertations & Thesis Gradwoorks site
 
Random aspects of beam physics and laser-plasma interactions
Direct excitation of kinetic, nonlinear electron-hole BGK waves in a non-neutral electron plasma
 
Transition from Fowler-Nordheim field emission to space charge limited current in both classical and relativistic regimes
Plasma ion sources and ion beam technology in microfabrications
 
Rigorous derivation of the Landau equation in the weak coupling limit
The interaction of energetic charged particles with gas and boundaries in the particle simulation of plasmas
 
Ion and neutral energy distributions in multifrequency capacitive discharges
Experimental studies of pulsatile flows through compliant tubes undergoing forced wall motion: Applications to hemodynamics and stability
 
Intense ion beams for warm dense matter physics
Interactions of shock waves with material interfaces in lithotripsy and inertial confinement fusion
 
Wind dispersion of carbon dioxide leaking from underground sequestration, and outlier detection in eddy covariance data using extreme value theory
Formulation and solution of the inverse problem for Jupiter's atmospheric vortices
 
Theoretical models of Gamma-Ray Burst central engines
Halogen-based plasma etching of novel field-effect transistor gate materials
 
Gamma-ray observations of solar-flare ion acceleration
Super-hot (T > 30 MK) thermal plasma in solar flares
 
Langmuir waves and electron acceleration at heliospheric shocks
Plasma diagnostics and plasma-surface interactions in inductively coupled plasmas
 
The structure of the solar wind in the inner heliosphere
Measurements of plasma bremsstrahlung and plasma energy density produced by electron cyclotron resonance ion source plasmas
 
Inelastic X-ray Scattering Measurements of Ionization in Warm, Dense Matter
Oxygen Loss from Venus and the Influence of Extreme Solar Wind Conditions