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Hartmut Zohm (born 2 November 1962) is a German plasma physicist who is known for his work on the ASDEX Upgrade machine.[1][2] He received the 2014 John Dawson Award[3] and the 2016 Hannes Alfvén Prize[4] for successfully demonstrating that neoclassical tearing modes in tokamaks can be stabilized by electron cyclotron resonance heating,[5][6] which is an important design consideration for pushing the performance limit of the ITER.[1][2]
With his department at the ASDEX Upgrade (and JET),[8] he researches plasma states (tokamak scenarios), energy dissipation, particle control including the removal of helium ash and the control of edge instabilities (edge localized modes) for optimal operation of ITER and DEMO.[9][10][11][12]
In 2016, he and Sergei Bulanov received the Hannes Alfvén Prize from the European Physical Society for "their experimental and theoretical contributions to the development of large-scale next-step devices in high-temperature plasma physics research".[4]