393 research outputs found

    Understanding the core density profile in TCV H-mode plasmas

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    Results from a database analysis of H-mode electron density profiles on the Tokamak \`a Configuration Variable (TCV) in stationary conditions show that the logarithmic electron density gradient increases with collisionality. By contrast, usual observations of H-modes showed that the electron density profiles tend to flatten with increasing collisionality. In this work it is reinforced that the role of collisionality alone, depending on the parameter regime, can be rather weak and in these, dominantly electron heated TCV cases, the electron density gradient is tailored by the underlying turbulence regime, which is mostly determined by the ratio of the electron to ion temperature and that of their gradients. Additionally, mostly in ohmic plasmas, the Ware-pinch can significantly contribute to the density peaking. Qualitative agreement between the predicted density peaking by quasi-linear gyrokinetic simulations and the experimental results is found. Quantitative comparison would necessitate ion temperature measurements, which are lacking in the considered experimental dataset. However, the simulation results show that it is the combination of several effects that influences the density peaking in TCV H-mode plasmas.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figure

    Multi-tool formaldehyde measurement in simulated and real atmospheres for indoor air survey and concentration change monitoring

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    International audienceFormaldehyde is of particular health concern since it is carcinogenic for human and ubiquitous in indoor air where people spend most of their time. Therefore, it is important to have suitable methods and techniques to measure its content in indoor air. In the present work, four different techniques have been tested in the INERIS exposure chamber and in indoor environments in comparison to a standard active method: passive sampling method based on the reaction of 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine with formaldehyde, two on-line continuous monitoring systems based on fluorescence and UV measurements and a portable commercialised analyser based on electrochemical titration. Two formaldehyde concentrations, about 10 and 25 μg m−3 were generated in an exposure chamber under controlled conditions of temperature, relative humidity, and wind speed to simulate real conditions and assess potential influence on passive sampling and continuous systems response. Influence of sampling periods on passive sampling has also been evaluated. The real atmosphere experiments have been performed in four different indoor environments: an office, a furniture shop, a shopping mall, and residential dwellings in which several potential formaldehyde sources linked to household activities have been tested. The analytical and sampling problems associated with each measurement method have been identified and discussed. An overall agreement between each technique has been observed and continuous analyzers allowed for formaldehyde concentrations change monitoring and secondary formation of that pollutant observation

    Pathways to sustainable land-use and food systems: 2019 Report of the FABLE Consortium

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    This first report by the FABLE Consortium presents preliminary pathways towards sustainable land-use and food systems prepared by the 18 country teams from developed and developing countries, including the European Union. The aim of these pathways is to determine and demonstrate the technical feasibility of making land-use and food systems sustainable in each country. They can also inform mid-century low-emission development strategies under the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. FABLE country teams have aimed for consistency with the SDGs and the Paris Agreement objectives. At this early stage, not all target dimensions have been considered. The report does not discuss policy options for transforming these systems, their implementation, or associated costs and economic benefits. These critical issues will be addressed in the global report by the Food and Land-Use Coalition, which will be published in September 2019 ahead of the Climate Summit convened by UN Secretary-General António Guterres

    Three-Quark Potential in SU(3) Lattice QCD

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    The static three-quark (3Q) potential is measured in the SU(3) lattice QCD with 123×2412^3 \times 24 and β=5.7\beta=5.7 at the quenched level. From the 3Q Wilson loop, the 3Q ground-state potential V3QV_{\rm 3Q} is extracted using the smearing technique for the ground-state enhancement. With accuracy better than a few %, V3QV_{\rm 3Q} is well described by a sum of a constant, the two-body Coulomb term and the three-body linear confinement term σ3QLmin\sigma_{\rm 3Q} L_{\rm min}, where LminL_{\rm min} denotes the minimal length of the color flux tube linking the three quarks. By comparing with the Q-Qˉ\bar {\rm Q} potential, we find a universal feature of the string tension, σ3Q≃σQQˉ\sigma_{\rm 3Q} \simeq \sigma_{\rm Q \bar Q}, as well as the one-gluon-exchange result for the Coulomb coefficient, A3Q≃12AQQˉA_{\rm 3Q} \simeq \frac12 A_{\rm Q \bar Q}.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figur

    MIRA: a Multiphysics Approach to Designing a Fusion Power Plant

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    Fusion systems codes (SCs) are deployed to produce the baseline of the European fusion power reactor (DEMO) within its conceptual design. A DEMO baseline is mostly defined by a radial/vertical reactor sketch and major reactor parameters, such as fusion and net electric power, magnetic fields, and plasma burn time. A baseline shall also meet a set of prescribed reactor requirements, constraints, and architectural features. According to the conceptual design workflow implemented within the EU-DEMO programme, the output from the SC is transferred to the detailed physics and engineering design codes. Presently-available fusion SCs rely on rather basic physics and engineering models (mostly at zero or one-dimensional level). The design codes, instead, are very detailed but run on much longer computing times. To fill the gap between systems and design codes, the multi-fidelity systems/design tool modular integrated reactor analysis (MIRA)—has been recently developed. MIRA incorporates the physics and the engineering insights of the utmost domains of tokamak reactors and relies on a higher spatial resolution, spanning from 1D up to 3D modelling frames. The MIRA approach has been applied to the DEMO 2017 baseline, generated by the EU reference SC PROCESS and used as input to MIRA. In the paper, the architectural and mathematical insights of the MIRA package are described, along with an EU-DEMO 2017 baseline analysis
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