Ady Hershcovitch is a plasma physicist best known for his 1995 invention, the plasma window,[1] which was later patented. (United States Patent: 5578831:Hershcovitch).[2] In the plasma window, a plasma (which is an ionized gas confined by electric and magnetic fields) separates air from a vacuum by preventing the air from rushing into the vacuum. This scientific development can facilitate non-vacuum ion material modification, manufacturing of superalloys, and high-quality non-vacuum electron-beam welding.[3][4] The device has been compared to the force field in the Star Trek TV series.[5] He is well known for his work in plasma physics at Brookhaven National Laboratory.[6][7] He has over 80 publications[citation needed] and 15 patents.[8]
In Tomsk, Russia, Hershcovitch works as a consultant for Plasma Sources LTD.[15] He also works with the Skolkovo Foundation as a Nuclear Cluster Expert Panel Member to promote research that can result in commercial products.[16] Since 2010, Hershcovitch has also been a visiting scientist at the Riken Nishina Center in Wako, Japan.[17]
Awards and honors
In 1987, he received the I.R. 100 Award for the development of ion-sensitive probe and in 1996, after patenting the Plasma Window, Hershcovitch received the R&D 100 Award, both selected as one of the 100 most significant technological developments worldwide.[18] On October 1, 2007, he was elected to the American Physical Society Fellowship.[19]
Personal life
Hershcovitch is currently married to Kathy Hershcovitch and resides in Long Island, NY.[20]
Media
Hershcovitch's plasma window was featured on the History Channel program "The Universe" pertaining to Weapons of the Future.[21] The Plasma Window is featured in book by Michio Kaku titled "Physics of the Impossible".[22]New Scientist has listed the plasma window as one of the 10 impossibilities conquered by science.[23]
^"Acceleron Electron Beam, LLC, Wins Grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to Commercialize New Welding Technique Developed at Brookhaven Lab". BNL News Release. Brookhaven National Laboratory.
^"Hot Mettle". No. New Scientist. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
^A. Hershcovitch; M. Blaskiewicz; J.M. Brennan; A. Chawla; W. Fischer; C.-J. Liaw; W. Meng; R. Todd; A. Custer; M. Erickson; N. Jamshidi; P. Kobrin; R. Laping; H. J. Poole. "Device and technique for in-situ coating of the RHIC cold bore vacuum tubes with thick OFHC*". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^"BNL Wins R&D 100 Award for 'Plasma Window"(PDF). Vol. 50, no. 41. Brookhave Bulletin. United States Department of Energy -- Brookhaven National Laboratory. October 18, 1996. Retrieved 14 May 2017.