Harnessing plasma’s potential to provide near-limitless energy
Merging plasma physics and engineering for fusion applications
Unraveling the behavior of the fourth state of matter
Understanding and counteracting plasma’s effects on materials
Studying plasma’s reactions to extreme conditions
Drawing practical solutions from lab science
Ph.D. Physics, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne (Switzerland) 2009
M.Sc. Nuclear Engineering, Polytechnic of Milan, Milan (Italy) 2004
Magnetic confinement fusion, plasma fluctuation diagnostics design and construction, signal processing, transport and gyro-kinetic modeling, Monte-Carlo modeling of nuclear fission reactors
Dr. Marinoni research interests include on anomalous transport in magnetically confined plasmas, focusing on both experimental and modeling/theoretical aspects.
His current primary responsibility is to measure density fluctuations on the DIII-D tokamak using the Phase Contrast Imaging diagnostic. Additional research is devoted to designing and executing experiments in DIII-D, as well as using advanced modeling tools for analysis.
For a complete list, see Google Scholar.