Clifford Michael Surko (born October 11, 1941, in Sacramento, California) is an American physicist,[1] whose works involve plasma physics, atomic physics, nonlinear dynamics and solid state physics.[2][3][4] Together with his colleagues, he developed techniques for laser scattering at small angles to study waves and turbulence in tokamak plasmas and invented a positron trap (buffer gas positron trap) that was used in experiments worldwide to study antimatter.[5][6] Surko also developed other techniques for studying positron plasmas[7] and examined atomic and plasma physics with positrons.[8]
In 2014, he received the James Clerk Maxwell Prize for Plasma Physics for "the invention of and development of techniques to accumulate, confine, and utilize positron plasmas, and for seminal experimental studies of waves and turbulence in tokamak plasmas".[11]
References
^Gale Group. (2004). American men & women of science. Gale. OCLC1082415302.
^Sullivan, J. P.; Marler, J. P.; Gilbert, S. J.; Buckman, S. J.; Surko, C. M. (2001). "Excitation of Electronic States of Ar, ${H}_{2}$, and ${N}_{2}$ by Positron Impact". Physical Review Letters. 87 (7): 073201. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.87.073201. PMID11497889.
^Surko, C. M.; Reif, F. (1968). "Investigation of a New Kind of Energetic Neutral Excitation in Superfluid Helium". Physical Review. 175 (1): 229–241. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.175.229.
^Sullivan, James P.; Gilbert, Steven J.; Buckman, Stephen J.; Surko, Clifford M. (2001). "Search for resonances in the scattering of low-energy positrons from atoms and molecules". Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics. 34 (15): L467–L474. doi:10.1088/0953-4075/34/15/102. ISSN0953-4075.
^Surko, Clifford M. Gianturco, Franco A., 1938- (2002). New directions in antimatter chemistry and physics. Kluwer Academic. OCLC839947424.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Surko, C. M.; Leventhal, M.; Passner, A.; Wysocki, F. J. (1988). "A positron plasma in the laboratory—how and why". AIP Conference Proceedings. 175 (1): 75–90. doi:10.1063/1.37614. ISSN0094-243X.