298 research outputs found
Observation of explosive collisionless reconnection in 3D nonlinear gyrofluid simulations
The nonlinear dynamics of collisionless reconnecting modes is investigated,
in the framework of a three-dimensional gyrofluid model. This is the relevant
regime of high-temperature plasmas, where reconnection is made possible by
electron inertia and has higher growth rates than resistive reconnection. The
presence of a strong guide field is assumed, in a background slab model, with
Dirichlet boundary conditions in the direction of nonuniformity. Values of ion
sound gyro-radius and electron collisionless skin depth much smaller than the
current layer width are considered. Strong acceleration of growth is found at
the onset to nonlinearity, while at all times the energy functional is well
conserved. Nonlinear growth rates more than one order of magnitude higher than
linear growth rates are observed when entering into the small- regime
Decay of geodesic acoustic modes due to the combined action of phase mixing and Landau damping
Geodesic acoustic modes (GAMs) are oscillations of the electric field whose
importance in tokamak plasmas is due to their role in the regulation of
turbulence. The linear collisionless damping of GAMs is investigated here by
means of analytical theory and numerical simulations with the global
gyrokinetic particle-in-cell code ORB5. The combined effect of the phase mixing
and Landau damping is found to quickly redistribute the GAM energy in
phase-space, due to the synergy of the finite orbit width of the passing ions
and the cascade in wave number given by the phase mixing. When plasma
parameters characteristic of realistic tokamak profiles are considered, the GAM
decay time is found to be an order of magnitude lower than the decay due to the
Landau damping alone, and in some cases of the same order of magnitude of the
characteristic GAM drive time due to the nonlinear interaction with an ITG
mode. In particular, the radial mode structure evolution in time is
investigated here and reproduced quantitatively by means of a dedicated initial
value code and diagnostics.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Plasma
2D continuous spectrum of shear Alfven waves in the presence of a magnetic island
The radial structure of the continuous spectrum of shear Alfven modes is
calculated in the presence of a magnetic island in tokamak plasmas. Modes with
the same helicity of the magnetic island are considered in a slab model
approximation. In this framework, with an appropriate rotation of the
coordinates the problem reduces to 2 dimensions. Geometrical effects due to the
shape of the flux surface's cross section are retained to all orders. On the
other hand, we keep only curvature effects responsible of the beta induced gap
in the low-frequency part of the continuous spectrum. New continuum
accumulation points are found at the O-point of the magnetic island. The
beta-induced Alfven Eigenmodes (BAE) continuum accumulation point is found to
be positioned at the separatrix flux surface. The most remarkable result is the
nonlinear modification of the BAE continuum accumulation point frequency
Nonlinear interplay of Alfven instabilities and energetic particles in tokamaks
The confinement of energetic particles (EP) is crucial for an efficient
heating of tokamak plasmas. Plasma instabilities such as Alfven Eigenmodes (AE)
can redistribute the EP population making the plasma heating less effective,
and leading to additional loads on the walls. The nonlinear dynamics of
toroidicity induced AE (TAE) is investigated by means of the global gyrokinetic
particle-in-cell code ORB5, within the NEMORB project. The nonperturbative
nonlinear interplay of TAEs and EP due to the wave-particle nonlinearity is
studied. In particular, we focus on the nonlinear modification of the
frequency, growth rate and radial structure of the TAE, depending on the
evolution of the EP distribution in phase space. For the ITPA benchmark case,
we find that the frequency increases when the growth rate decreases, and the
mode shrinks radially. This nonlinear evolution is found to be correctly
reproduced by means of a quasilinear model, namely a model where the linear
effects of the nonlinearly modified EP distribution function are retained.Comment: Submitted to Plasma Phys. Control. Fusio
Nonlinear velocity redistribution caused by energetic-particle-driven geodesic acoustic modes, mapped with the beam-plasma system
The nonlinear dynamics of energetic particle (EP) driven geodesic acoustic
modes (EGAM) in tokamaks is investigated, and compared with the beam-plasma
system (BPS). The EGAM is studied with the global gyrokinetic (GK)
particle-in-cell code ORB5, treating the thermal ions and EP (in this case,
fast ions) as GK and neglecting the kinetic effects of the electrons. The
wave-particle nonlinearity only is considered in the EGAM nonlinear dynamics.
The BPS is studied with a 1D code where the thermal plasma is treated as a
linear dielectric, and the EP (in this case, fast electrons) with an n-body
hamiltonian formulation. A one-to-one mapping between the EGAM and the BPS is
described. The focus is on understanding and predicting the EP redistribution
in phase space. We identify here two distint regimes for the mapping: in the
low-drive regime, the BPS mapping with the EGAM is found to be complete, and in
the high-drive regime, the EGAM dynamics and the BPS dynamics are found to
differ. The transition is described with the presence of a non-negligible
frequency chirping, which affects the EGAM but not the BPS, above the
identified drive threshold. The difference can be resolved by adding an ad-hoc
frequency modification to the BPS model. As a main result, the formula for the
prediction of the nonlinear width of the velocity redistribution around the
resonance velocity is provided
Phase and amplitude evolution in the network of triadic interactions of the Hasegawa-Wakatani system
The Hasegawa-Wakatani system, commonly used as a toy model of dissipative drift waves in fusion devices, is revisited with considerations of phase and amplitude dynamics of its triadic interactions. It is observed that a single resonant triad can saturate via three way phase locking, where the phase differences between dominant modes converge to constant values as individual phases increase in time. This allows the system to have approximately constant amplitude solutions. Non-resonant triads show similar behavior only when one of its legs is a zonal wave number. However, when an additional triad, which is a reflection of the original one with respect to the y axis is included, the behavior of the resulting triad pair is shown to be more complex. In particular, it is found that triads involving small radial wave numbers (large scale zonal flows) end up transferring their energy to the subdominant mode which keeps growing exponentially, while those involving larger radial wave numbers (small scale zonal flows) tend to find steady chaotic or limit cycle states (or decay to zero). In order to study the dynamics in a connected network of triads, a network formulation is considered, including a pump mode, and a number of zonal and non-zonal subdominant modes as a dynamical system. It was observed that the zonal modes become clearly dominant only when a large number of triads are connected. When the zonal flow becomes dominant as a "collective mean field,"individual interactions between modes become less important, which is consistent with the inhomogeneous wave-kinetic picture. Finally, the results of direct numerical simulation are discussed for the same parameters, and various forms of the order parameter are computed. It is observed that nonlinear phase dynamics results in a flattening of the large scale phase velocity as a function of scale in direct numerical simulations
Corrigendum: Electromagnetic turbulence suppression by energetic particle driven modes (2019 Nucl. Fusion 59 124001), Nuclear Fusion 60, 089501 (2020)
In recent years, a strong reduction of plasma turbulence in the presence of
energetic particles has been reported in a number of magnetic confinement
experiments and corresponding gyrokinetic simulations. While highly relevant to
performance predictions for burning plasmas, an explanation for this primarily
nonlinear effect has remained elusive so far. A thorough analysis finds that
linearly marginally stable energetic particle driven modes are excited
nonlinearly, depleting the energy content of the turbulence and acting as an
additional catalyst for energy transfer to zonal modes (the dominant turbulence
saturation channel). Respective signatures are found in a number of simulations
for different JET and ASDEX Upgrade discharges with reduced transport levels
attributed to energetic ion effects
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