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Building a one-of-a-kind plasma wind tunnel to advance hypersonics at 抖阴旅行射 Boulder

Building a one-of-a-kind plasma wind tunnel to advance hypersonics at 抖阴旅行射 Boulder

Hisham Ali

Above: Hisham Ali.
Header Image: Plasma discharge from Ali's existing supersonic low-density RF plasma wind-tunnel facility.

Hisham Ali is pushing the limits of plasma physics and hypersonics in his lab on campus to advance a nationally important area of science and engineering.

Ali, an assistant professor in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder, studies magnetohydrodynamics. It is the investigation of the magnetic properties and behavior of electrically conducting fluids, such as the plasmas generated during extremely high-speed flight 鈥 a critical area for hypersonic vehicles.

鈥淚t鈥檚 fluid mechanics, plasma physics, fluids interacting electrically. We鈥檙e specifically looking at what happens when a spacecraft reenters the atmosphere. There is a tremendous need for funding hypersonic research as a nation,鈥 Ali said.

Ali鈥檚 team is currently building a plasma wind tunnel, a highly complex undertaking to conduct experimental research of the conditions space vehicles experience during atmospheric reentry.

鈥淲e have a unique opportunity. These kinds of facilities don鈥檛 come online very often. We here at 抖阴旅行射 Boulder as well as others in the outside scientific and engineering community are very excited,鈥 Ali said.

As he and his team endeavor to complete construction and begin experiments in the plasma wind tunnel, they are also conducting mission design and computational trajectory work.

鈥淚t鈥檚 modeling, mission design, and trajectory work for a Neptune plasma-assisted aerocapture probe in addition to the work on the wind tunnel. We鈥檙e very busy,鈥 Ali said.

The work is a culmination of sorts for Ali. Growing up, he decided early to become an aerospace engineer, but despite excelling in science and math it was not a sure thing.

鈥淢y parents emigrated from Sudan when I was a year old. They had earned doctorates in Sudan in veterinary medicine, but that didn鈥檛 carry over to the United States and they had to re-enroll in graduate school here. Both of my parents worked nights and weekends in fast food to support us for most of the 1990s while they completed their studies. When I earned scholarships to go to college, it was very helpful to us,鈥 Ali said.

He successfully earned the National Achievement Scholarship, a college fellowship designed to increase opportunities for Black students. Ali said as an honor intended for specific groups, there were some challenges.

鈥淧eople said it wasn鈥檛 fair because they thought the bar was lower for the Achievement Scholarship compared to the National Merit Scholarship,鈥 Ali said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e both very competitive, and then I also received the National Merit Scholarship. There鈥檚 sometimes a perception you鈥檙e not as good.鈥

He then attended the University of Alabama and participated in internships at NASA鈥檚 Marshall Spaceflight Center in Huntsville. Ali enjoyed research, but was not sure if graduate school was for him.

鈥淭hankfully, the people I knew at NASA encouraged me to apply to graduate school and to NASA graduate fellowships,鈥 Ali said. 鈥淚 also had a very supportive undergraduate research advisor at the University of Alabama. They told me I was good enough.鈥

Ali went on to Georgia Tech, where he earned his master鈥檚 and PhD in aerospace engineering and met his wife, who has a PhD of her own in biomedical engineering. They then came to Colorado so she could earn another doctorate in medicine at the 抖阴旅行射 Anschutz Campus. Ali worked for the Aerospace Corporation in Colorado Springs for a year before officially joining 抖阴旅行射 Boulder in 2022.

Ali said he also hopes to enhance the environment for other budding Black engineers during his time on campus and in the department.

鈥淚 had mentors who happened to be Black who said there鈥檚 a place for you. Not only is this for you, you鈥檙e needed here. I want to do that for others,鈥 Ali said.