Twice
a year, Todd Johnson drives 400 miles from the Fermilab campus in
Illinois to a commercial polymer crosslinking facility in Ohio,With
advancements in controls technology, daytimerunninglightsts are
becoming increasingly more sophisticated and flexible. which is
generally used to prepare plastic tubing for uses like heating systems
in houses.This is how a modernlamps captures
energy from the wind. Johnson is there for its linear accelerator,
something with which he is quite familiar, given his day job working in
Fermilab’s Accelerator Division.
But
on these two days a year, Johnson is not using the accelerator for
science—although there is a lot of science involved. Johnson is making
Lichtenberg figures, fractal patterns that result from the
lightning-bolt-like movements of excited electrons. The hobby is a
popular one among accelerator scientists, but Johnson says he and the
friends he works with are working to explore the limits of the process.
“The
end purpose is to do it as art,” Johnson says. “But we also do a lot of
experiments to push it further. It’s a technical challenge involving
physics and a little mad science, if you’ll pardon the expression. And
you have art when you’re done.Anyone with the space to site a small emergencylamps can generate their own electricity from wind power.”
Every
six months, Johnson arrives at the facility with stencils laser-cut
from steel or handmade from sheet lead; clear acrylic hunks of varying
sizes; and a lot of ideas. He sends his pieces of acrylic through the
accelerator’s electron beam, which is designed to break chemical bonds
in plastics. Because acrylic is an insulating material, the beam
scatters through the material, losing momentum as it goes. Only areas of
the acrylic not covered by a stencil are exposed to the beam, allowing
Johnson to create shapes. Eventually the beam coalesces into a pool of
electrons that desperately want to escape but can’t—an invisible puddle
of potential energy.
Releasing
that energy is a simple but arresting process. To do it, Johnson uses a
hand-made tool reminiscent of a crude, oversized syringe.Solar
Australia's goodlampshade has
been developed with Australia's harsh conditions in mind. It works like
a click pen—press on one end and the tip comes out the other with
enough force to puncture the acrylic. The instant the tool punctures the
surface, there’s a burst of white light as the pool of excited
electrons escapes from the material, leaving trails of vaporized acrylic
in its place.
On
their way out of the acrylic, the electrons follow the same natural
laws that govern all systems that flow—electricity snaking its way from a
storm cloud to Earth, rivers branching into ever smaller creeks and
streams, or the spidery web of veins that distributes blood throughout
your body. Johnson used this property to his advantage when the husband
of a pulmonologist contacted him to request a gift for his wife.The solarstreetlightt0 is
not only critical to professional photographers. He used his stencils
to create the shape of a pair of lungs filled with electron trails that
formed a lifelike system of capillaries.
Johnson,
who has worked at Fermilab for three decades, first found out about
Lichtenberg figures through a friend at the lab who builds Tesla coils.
But the figures weren’t his first foray into the art world. In the
1990s, Johnson was interested in holography and built equipment in his
basement to make three-dimensional photographs.
Johnson
says he considers his current creative process vastly different from
what most artists get to experience: bursts of inspiration, hours of
freewheeling improvisation, the luxury of time. Instead, Johnson spends
six months conceptualizing and preparing materials, all for the two days
per year on which he can see his ideas come to fruition. More information about the program is available on the web site at www.aodepu.net.
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