4,556 research outputs found
High-m Kink/Tearing Modes in Cylindrical Geometry
The global ideal kink equation, for cylindrical geometry and zero beta, is
simplified in the high poloidal mode number limit and used to determine the
tearing stability parameter, . In the presence of a steep
monotonic current gradient, becomes a function of a parameter,
, characterising the ratio of the maximum current gradient to
magnetic shear, and , characterising the separation of the resonant
surface from the maximum of the current gradient. In equilibria containing a
current "spike", so that there is a non-monotonic current profile,
also depends on two parameters: , related to the ratio
of the curvature of the current density at its maximum to the magnetic shear,
and , which now represents the separation of the resonance from the point
of maximum current density. The relation of our results to earlier studies of
tearing modes and to recent gyro-kinetic calculations of current driven
instabilities, is discussed, together with potential implications for the
stability of the tokamak pedestal.Comment: To appear in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusio
Evaluation of a Tree-based Pipeline Optimization Tool for Automating Data Science
As the field of data science continues to grow, there will be an
ever-increasing demand for tools that make machine learning accessible to
non-experts. In this paper, we introduce the concept of tree-based pipeline
optimization for automating one of the most tedious parts of machine
learning---pipeline design. We implement an open source Tree-based Pipeline
Optimization Tool (TPOT) in Python and demonstrate its effectiveness on a
series of simulated and real-world benchmark data sets. In particular, we show
that TPOT can design machine learning pipelines that provide a significant
improvement over a basic machine learning analysis while requiring little to no
input nor prior knowledge from the user. We also address the tendency for TPOT
to design overly complex pipelines by integrating Pareto optimization, which
produces compact pipelines without sacrificing classification accuracy. As
such, this work represents an important step toward fully automating machine
learning pipeline design.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, preprint to appear in GECCO 2016, edits not yet
made from reviewer comment
The effect of sheared diamagnetic flow on turbulent structures generated by the Charney–Hasegawa–Mima equation
The generation of electrostatic drift wave turbulence is modelled by the Charney–Hasegawa–Mima equation. The equilibrium density gradient n0=n0(x) is chosen so that dn0 /dx is nonzero and spatially variable (i.e., v*e is sheared). It is shown that this sheared diamagnetic flow leads to localized turbulence which is concentrated at max(grad n0), with a large dv*e/dx inhibiting the spread of the turbulence in the x direction. Coherent structures form which propagate with the local v*e in the y direction. Movement in the x direction is accompanied by a change in their amplitudes. When the numerical code is initialized with a single wave, the plasma behaviour is dominated by the initial mode and its harmonics
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