The project has made substantial progress in developing both experimental and numerical methodologies to generate extreme conditions in liquids. A dedicated research facility, the DynPress lab, was established, equipped with a pulsed power generator and advanced diagnostic systems. The facility enables controlled generation of underwater explosions producing shock waves that travel at speeds of up to of 3 km/s and corresponding pressures in the range of tens of GPa. In addition a special technique is being developed to create a rapid tension of liquids to generate the proposed negative pressure ranges. Recent, yet not final, results demonstrate the appearance of cavitation effects in the vicinity of the rarefaction wave implosion.
For data collection, advanced high-speed imaging (up to 10 million frames per second) and fiber-optic hydrophone sensors were integrated to measure pressure changes with high accuracy, ensuring that shock dynamics could be recorded and analyzed in unprecedented detail. On the computational front, an in-house magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) code was developed , incorporating SESAME tables to improve the thermodynamic accuracy of simulations for materials like copper and water. This code, validated against experimental data, offers insights into energy transfer processes and material behavior in such extreme conditions.