87 research outputs found
Pressure-gradient-induced Alfven eigenmodes: II. Kinetic excitation with ion temperature gradient
The kinetic excitation of ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) discrete Alfven
eigenmodes in the second MHD ballooning stable domain is studied in the
presence of a thermal ion temperature gradient (ITG), using linear gyrokinetic
particle-in-cell simulations of a local flux tube in shifted-circle tokamak
geometry. The instabilities are identified as alpha-induced toroidal Alfven
eigenmodes (alpha-TAE); that is, bound states trapped between
pressure-gradient-induced potential barriers of the Schroedinger equation for
shear Alfven waves. Using numerical tools, we examine in detail the effect of
kinetic thermal ion compression on alpha-TAEs; both non-resonant coupling to
ion sound waves and wave-particle resonances. It is shown that the Alfvenic ITG
instability thresholds (e.g., the critical temperature gradient) are determined
by two resonant absorption mechanisms: Landau damping and continuum damping.
The numerical results are interpreted on the basis of a theoretical framework
previously derived from a variational formulation. The present analysis of
properties and structures of Alfvenic fluctuations in the presence of steep
pressure gradients applies for both positive or negative magnetic shear and can
serve as an interpretative framework for experimental observations in (future)
high-performance fusion plasmas of reactor relevance.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figure
Dynamics of resistive double tearing modes with broad linear spectra
The nonlinear evolution of resistive double tearing modes (DTMs) with safety
factor values q=1 and q=3 is studied in a reduced cylindrical model of a
tokamak plasma. We focus on cases where the resonant surfaces are a small
distance apart. Recent numerical studies have shown that in such configurations
high-m modes are strongly unstable. In this paper, it is first demonstrated
that linear DTM theory predicts the dominance of high-m DTMs. A semi-empirical
formula for estimating the poloidal mode number of the fastest growing mode,
m_peak, is obtained from the existing linear theory. Second, using nonlinear
simulations, it is shown that the presence of fast growing high-m modes leads
to a rapid turbulent collapse in an annular region, whereby small magnetic
island structures form. Furthermore, consideration is given to the evolution of
low-m modes, in particular the global m=1 internal kink, which can undergo
nonlinear driving through coupling to fast growing linear high-m DTMs. Factors
influencing the details of the dynamics are discussed. These results may be
relevant for the understanding of the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) activity near
the minimum of q and may thus be of interest to studies concerned with
stability and confinement in advanced tokamaks.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Large-mode-number magnetohydrodynamic instability driven by sheared flows in a tokamak plasma with reversed central shear
The effect of a narrow sub-Alfvenic shear flow layer near the minimum q_min
of the tokamak safety factor profile in a configuration with reversed central
shear is analyzed. Sufficiently strong velocity shear gives rise to a broad
spectrum of fast growing Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH)-like ideal magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) modes with dominant mode numbers m,n ~ 10. Nonlinear simulations with
finite resistivity show magnetic reconnection near ripples caused by KH-like
vortices, the formation of turbulent structures, and a flattening of the flow
profile. The KH modes are compared to double tearing modes (DTM) which dominate
at lower shearing rates. The possible application of these results in tokamaks
with internal transport barrier is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Nonlinear evolution of the m=1 internal kink mode in the presence of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence
The nonlinear evolution of the m=1 internal kink mode is studied numerically
in a setting where the tokamak core plasma is surrounded by a turbulent region
with low magnetic shear. As a starting point we choose configurations with
three nearby q=1 surfaces where triple tearing modes (TTMs) with high poloidal
mode numbers m are unstable. While the amplitudes are still small, the fast
growing high-m TTMs enhance the growth of the m=1 instability. This is
interpreted as a fast sawtooth trigger mechanism. The TTMs lead to a partial
collapse, leaving behind a turbulent belt with q ~= 1 around the unreconnected
core plasma. Although, full reconnection can occur if the core displacement
grows large enough, it is shown that the turbulence may actively prevent
further reconnection. This is qualitatively similar to experimentally observed
partial sawtooth crashes with post-cursor oscillations due to a saturated
internal kink.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure
Fast growing double tearing modes in a tokamak plasma
Configurations with nearby multiple resonant surfaces have broad spectra of
linearly unstable coupled tearing modes with dominant high poloidal mode
numbers m. This was recently shown for the case of multiple q = 1 resonances
[Bierwage et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 94 (6), 65001 (2005)]. In the present work,
similar behavior is found for double tearing modes (DTM) on resonant surfaces
with q >= 1. A detailed analysis of linear instability characteristics of DTMs
with various mode numbers m is performed using numerical simulations. The mode
structures and dispersion relations for linearly unstable modes are calculated.
Comparisons between low- and higher-m modes are carried out, and the roles of
the inter-resonance distance and of the magnetic Reynolds number S_Hp are
investigated. High-m modes are found to be destabilized when the distance
between the resonant surfaces is small. They dominate over low-m modes in a
wide range of S_Hp, including regimes relevant for tokamak operation. These
results may be readily applied to configurations with more than two resonant
surfaces.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figure
Benchmark of multi-phase method for the computation of fast ion distributions in a tokamak plasma in the presence of low-amplitude resonant MHD activity
The transport of fast ions in a beam-driven JT-60U tokamak plasma subject to resonant magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) mode activity is simulated using the so-called multi-phase method, where 4 ms intervals of classical Monte-Carlo simulations (without MHD) are interlaced with 1 ms intervals of hybrid simulations (with MHD). The multi-phase simulation results are compared to results obtained with continuous hybrid simulations, which were recently validated against experimental data (Bierwage et al., 2017). It is shown that the multi-phase method, in spite of causing significant overshoots in the MHD fluctuation amplitudes, accurately reproduces the frequencies and positions of the dominant resonant modes, as well as the spatial profile and velocity distribution of the fast ions, while consuming only a fraction of the computation time required by the continuous hybrid simulation. The present paper is limited to low-amplitude fluctuations consisting of a few long-wavelength modes that interact only weakly with each other. The success of this benchmark study paves the way for applying the multi-phase method to the simulation of Abrupt Large-amplitude Events (ALE), which were seen in the same JT-60U experiments but at larger time intervals. Possible implications for the construction of reduced models for fast ion transport are discussed
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