993 research outputs found
Main chamber wall plasma loads in JET-ITER-like wall at high radiated fraction
Future tokamak reactors of conventional design will require high levels of exhaust power dissipation (more than 90% of the input power) if power densities at the divertor targets are to remain compatible with active cooling. Impurity seeded H-mode discharges in JET-ITER-like Wall (ILW) have reached a max- imum radiative fraction ( F rad ) of âŒ75%. Divertor Langmuir probe (LP) measurements in these discharges indicate, however, that less than âŒ3% of the thermal plasma power reaches the targets, suggesting a missing channel for power loss. This paper presents experimental evidence from limiter LP for enhanced cross-field particle fluxes on the main chamber walls at high F rad . In H-mode nitrogen-seeded discharges with F rad increasing from âŒ30% to up to âŒ75%, the main chamber wall particle fluence rises by a factor âŒ3 while the divertor plasma fluence drops by one order of magnitude. Contribution of main chamber wall particle losses to detachment, as suggested by EDGE2D-EIRENE modeling, is not sufficient to explain the magnitude of the observed divertor fluence reduction. An intermediate detached case obtained at F rad âŒ60% with neon seeding is also presented. Heat loads were measured using the main chamber wall thermocouples. Comparison between thermocouple and bolometry measurements shows that the frac- tion of the input power transported to the main chamber wall remains below âŒ5%, whatever the divertor detachment state is. Main chamber sputtering of beryllium by deuterium is reduced in detached condi- tions only on the low field side. If the fraction of power exhaust dissipated to the main chamber wall by cross-field transport in future reactors is similar to the JET-ILW levels, wall plasma power loading should not be an issue. However, other contributions such as charge exchange may be a problem.EURATOM 63305
An improved model for the accurate calculation of parallel heat fluxes at the JET bulk tungsten outer divertor
Parallel heat flux calculations at the JET divertor have been based on the assumption that
all incoming heat is due to the projection of the heat flux parallel to the magnetic line, q ,
plus a constant background. This simplification led to inconsistencies during the analysis of
a series of dedicated tungsten melting experiments performed in 2013, for which infrared
(IR) thermography surface measurements could not be recreated through simulations unless
the parallel heat flux was reduced by 80% for L-mode and 60% for H-mode. We give an
explanation for these differences using a new IR inverse analysis code, a set of geometrical
corrections, and most importantly an additional term for the divertor heat flux accounting for
non-parallel effects such as cross-field transport, recycled neutrals or charge exchange. This
component has been evaluated comparing four different geometries with impinging angles
varying from 2 to 90°. Its magnitude corresponds to 1.2%â1.9% of q , but because it is not
affected by the magnetic projection, it accounts for up to 20%â30% of the tile surface heat
flux. The geometrical corrections imply a further reduction of 24% of the measured heat
flux. In addition, the application of the new inverse code increases the accuracy of the tile
heat flux calculation, eliminating any previous discrepancy. The parallel heat flux computed
with this new model is actually much lower than previously deduced by inverse analysis of IR temperaturesâ40% for L-mode and 50% for H-modeâwhile being independent of
the geometry on which it is measured. This main result confirms the validity of the optical
projection as long as a non-constant and non-parallel component is considered. For a given
total heating power, the model predicts over 10% reduction of the maximum tile surface
heat flux compared to strict optical modelling, as well as a 30% reduced sensitivity to
manufacturing and assembling tolerances. These conclusions, along with the improvement in
the predictability of the divertor thermal behaviour, are critical for JET future DT operations,
and are also directly applicable to the design of the ITER divertor monoblocks.EURATOM 63305
Characterisation of the electromagnetic component in ultra-high energy inclined air showers
Inclined air showers - those arriving at ground with zenith angle with
respect to the vertical theta > 60 deg - are characterised by the dominance of
the muonic component at ground which is accompanied by an electromagnetic halo
produced mainly by muon decay and muon interactions. By means of Monte Carlo
simulations we give a full characterisation of the particle densities at ground
in ultra-high energy inclined showers as a function of primary energy and mass
composition, as well as for different hadronic models assumed in the
simulations. We also investigate the effect of intrinsic shower-to-shower
fluctuations in the particle densities.Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physic
Perturbative spectrum of Trapped Weakly Interacting Bosons in Two Dimensions
We study a trapped Bose-Einstein condensate under rotation in the limit of
weak, translational and rotational invariant two-particle interactions. We use
the perturbation-theory approach (the large-N expansion) to calculate the
ground-state energy and the excitation spectrum in the asymptotic limit where
the total number of particles N goes to infinity while keeping the total
angular momentum L finite. Calculating the probabilities of different
configurations of angular momentum in the exact eigenstates gives us a clear
view of the physical content of excitations. We briefly discuss the case of
repulsive contact interaction.Comment: Revtex, 10 pages, 1 table, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Low-Lying Excitations from the Yrast Line of Weakly Interacting Trapped Bosons
Through an extensive numerical study, we find that the low-lying,
quasi-degenerate eigenenergies of weakly-interacting trapped N bosons with
total angular momentum L are given in case of small L/N and sufficiently small
L by E = L hbar omega + g[N(N-L/2-1)+1.59 n(n-1)/2], where omega is the
frequency of the trapping potential and g is the strength of the repulsive
contact interaction; the last term arises from the pairwise repulsive
interaction among n octupole excitations and describes the lowest-lying
excitation spectra from the Yrast line. In this case, the quadrupole modes do
not interact with themselves and, together with the octupole modes, exhaust the
low-lying spectra which are separated from others by N-linear energy gaps.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX, 2 figures, revised version, submitted to PR
Skyrmion Excitation in Two-Dimensional Spinor Bose-Einstein Condensate
We study the properties of coreless vortices(skyrmion) in spinor
Bose-Einstein condensate. We find that this excitation is always energetically
unstable, it always decays to an uniform spin texture. We obtain the skyrmion
energy as a function of its size and position, a key quantity in understanding
the decay process. We also point out that the decay rate of a skyrmion with
high winding number will be slower. The interaction between skyrmions and other
excitation modes are also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, final version published in Phys. Rev.
Symmetric-Asymmetric transition in mixtures of Bose-Einstein condensates
We propose a new kind of quantum phase transition in phase separated mixtures
of Bose-Einstein condensates. In this transition, the distribution of the two
components changes from a symmetric to an asymmetric shape. We discuss the
nature of the phase transition, the role of interface tension and the phase
diagram. The symmetric to asymmetric transition is the simplest quantum phase
transition that one can imagine. Careful study of this problem should provide
us new insight into this burgeoning field of discovery.Comment: 6 pages, 3 eps figure
Ratios of Elastic Scattering of Pions from 3H and 3He
We have measured the elastic-scattering ratios of normalized yields for
charged pions from 3H and 3He in the backward hemisphere. At 180 MeV, we
completed the angular distribution begun with our earlier measurements, adding
six data points in the angular range of 119 deg to 169 deg in the pi-nucleus
center of mass. We also measured an excitation function with data points at
142, 180, 220, and 256 MeV incident pion energy at the largest achievable angle
for each energy between 160 deg and 170 deg in the pi-nucleus center of mass.
This excitation function corresponds to the energies of our forward-hemisphere
studies. The data, taken as a whole, show an apparent role reversal of the two
charge-symmetric ratios r1 and r2 in the backward hemisphere. Also, for data >
100 deg we observe a strong dependence on the four-momentum transfer squared
(-t) for all of the ratios regardless of pion energy or scattering angle, and
we find that the superratio R data match very well with calculations based on
the forward-hemisphere data that predicts the value of the difference between
the even-nucleon radii of 3H and 3He. Comparisons are also made with recent
calculations incorporating different wave functions and double scattering
models.Comment: RevTex 8pages, 12 figure file
Schmidt-hammer exposure ages from periglacial patterned ground (sorted circles) in Jotunheimen, Norway, and their interpretative problems
© 2016 Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography Periglacial patterned ground (sorted circles and polygons) along an altitudinal profile at Juvflya in central Jotunheimen, southern Norway, is investigated using Schmidt-hammer exposure-age dating (SHD). The patterned ground surfaces exhibit R-value distributions with platycurtic modes, broad plateaus, narrow tails, and a negative skew. Sample sites located between 1500 and 1925 m a.s.l. indicate a distinct altitudinal gradient of increasing mean R-values towards higher altitudes interpreted as a chronological function. An established regional SHD calibration curve for Jotunheimen yielded mean boulder exposure ages in the range 6910 ± 510 to 8240 ± 495 years ago. These SHD ages are indicative of the timing of patterned ground formation, representing minimum ages for active boulder upfreezing and maximum ages for the stabilization of boulders in the encircling gutters. Despite uncertainties associated with the calibration curve and the age distribution of the boulders, the early-Holocene age of the patterned ground surfaces, the apparent cessation of major activity during the Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM) and continuing lack of late-Holocene activity clarify existing understanding of the process dynamics and palaeoclimatic significance of large-scale sorted patterned ground as an indicator of a permafrost environment. The interpretation of SHD ages from patterned ground surfaces remains challenging, however, owing to their diachronous nature, the potential for a complex history of formation, and the influence of local, non-climatic factors
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