| Information for
Prospective Graduate Students on MST
At any given time there are about a dozen
graduate students doing experimental Ph.D. thesis research on the
MST reversed-field pinch plasma-confinement
device at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
and related theoretical studies. Most of these students are enrolled
full-time in the Department
of Physics and are supported with research assistantships or
fellowships.
If you are a bright undergraduate student majoring in physics or
some closely related field and you have an interest in pursuing
a graduate-level degree in experimental plasma physics, the University
of Wisconsin has much to offer. In addition to the plasma research
in the Department of Physics, there are major programs in the Department
of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics and in the Department
of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Physics students can do
their research in connection with any of the programs on campus,
and engineering graduate students often work on the MST device.
We recommend that students who want to do thesis research on the
MST device apply for admission to the Graduate
School in the Department
of Physics and request a teaching assistantship or fellowship
for the first year. You may also wish to apply for any other fellowships
for which you are qualified. Beginning graduate students are usually
considered for research assistantships only if you have had significant
prior experience in fusion-related plasma physics. During the first
year, you would be expected to pass the qualifying examination,
after which you would probably be offered a summer laboratory job
to allow you to observe the research and to assess mutual compatibility.
Most students start their research at the beginning of their second
year in residence. Master's degrees are available, but nearly all
graduate students working on MST are in the
Ph.D. program.
|