Dr McCloud says she and other campaigners will go to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg to seek a declaration that the actions of the UK government and Supreme Court judgement "violate [her] fundamental human rights".
Mahmoud Khalil, a US permanent resident and Columbia University graduate, was detained over the weekend and faces deportation for his participation in 2024 protests at the campus over the war in Gaza.Mr Khalil's legal team on Wednesday pushed to bring him back from a detention centre in Louisiana where he was sent after his arrest in New York.
The judge did not issue a ruling at the hearing, but directed prosecutors to prove why the case should take place elsewhere.Mr Khalil is a green card holder and is married to an American citizen, but his attorney said that when he was arrested, agents told him the green card was being revoked. Earlier this week, Judge Jesse Furman blocked President Donald Trump's attempt to deport him.The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has said the arrest was part of its effort to fulfil Trump's executive order that prohibits antisemitism. It accused Mr Khalil of leading "activities aligned to Hamas" - the Islamist group based in Gaza that the US has designated a terrorist organisation - but provided no details.
The BBC has asked the DHS for further information on the allegations.Absent from Wednesday's hearing was Mr Khalil, who is being held in Jena, Louisiana, after he was initially sent to a New Jersey facility Sunday, his lawyers said. Government lawyers argued in court that the deportation case should play out in Louisiana or New Jersey.
The judge will not issue a ruling on the jurisdiction or where Mr Khalil will be held until both sides file motions this week, including prosecutors' reasoning for moving the case away. They agreed the case should move "as expeditiously as possible", as Mr Khalil's attorney requested.
His lawyers said they had not been able to speak officially with their client by phone since his detainment and at times, did not know where he was. Judge Furman directed prosecutors on Wednesday to ensure phone access.Being able to predict sea conditions - especially the type of waves hitting beaches - would be critical.
"If you have a landing craft, it's much shorter than the length of the big swell waves that come off the Atlantic Ocean, so there was a risk that if it dived down in a swell wave it wouldn't come back up," explained the physical oceanography professor."Understanding whether there were going to be swell waves or just small choppy water was really important, so they could do the landing at the right time."
It was here that Darbyshire excelled within what was known as the top secret Group W in Teddington.He came up with a way to model wave patterns using iron buoys in the sea, and measuring their magnetic movements.