Jack Hare

Jack Hare

Visiting Assistant Professor
Electrical and Computer Engineering

Biography

Professor Jack Hare graduated with first class honors in natural sciences at the University of Cambridge in 2011, followed by a master’s degree in plasma physics from Princeton University in 2013. His Ph.D. research at Imperial College London was supervised by Professor Sergey Lebedev on the MAGPIE generator, where he studied magnetic reconnection in high-energy-density laboratory plasmas. He received his doctorate in 2017, followed by postdoctoral appointments at Imperial College (2017-2019 and 2020) and the Max -Planck Institute for Plasma Physics in Garching, Germany (2019). He started his new research group based around the PUFFIN pulsed-power generator at MIT in 2021, and moved to Cornell University in 2025.

Research Interests

Plasma makes up 99.99% of the visible matter in the Universe, and is also the state of matter necessary for producing controlled thermonuclear fusion as a carbon-free energy source. It’s necessary to understand the processes which move energy around within these plasmas in order to understand the dynamics of astrophysical objects, and how to stabilize and control the plasma inside a fusion power-plant. Prof. Hare studies these processes, such as magnetized shocks, magnetic reconnection, magnetized turbulence, by creating plasma in the laboratory using intense pulses of electrical current, which heat thin wires to the plasma state.

Teaching Interests

Plasma physics, plasma diagnostics, controlled fusion, electromagnetism, circuits.

Selected Publications

Selected Awards and Honors

  • MIT School of Engineering Ruth and Joel Spira Award for Distinguished Teaching, 2024
  • NSF CAREER award, 2023
  • Michigan Institute of Plasma Science and Engineering Early Career Lecturer, 2023
  • European Physical Society Plasma Physics Division PhD Research Award, 2018

Education

  • B.A. (Hons) Natural Science, University of Cambridge, 2010
  • M.Sci. Natural Sciences, University of Cambridge, 2011
  • M.A. Plasma Physics, Princeton University, 2013
  • Ph.D. Plasma Physics, Imperial College London, 2017

Websites