506 research outputs found

    Two-dimensional full wave simulation of microwave reflectometry on Alcator C-Mod

    Get PDF

    Experimental conditions to suppress edge localised modes by magnetic perturbations in the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak

    Full text link
    Access conditions for full suppression of Edge Localised Modes (ELMs) by Magnetic Perturbations (MP) in low density high confinement mode (H-mode) plasmas are studied in the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak. The main empirical requirements for full ELM suppression in our experiments are: 1. The poloidal spectrum of the MP must be aligned for best plasma response from weakly stable kink-modes, which amplify the perturbation, 2. The plasma edge density must be below a critical value, 3.3×10193.3 \times 10^{19}~m−3^{-3}. The edge collisionality is in the range νi∗=0.15−0.42\nu^*_i = 0.15-0.42 (ions) and νe∗=0.15−0.25\nu^*_e = 0.15-0.25 (electrons). However, our data does not show that the edge collisionality is the critical parameter that governs access to ELM suppression. 3. The pedestal pressure must be kept sufficiently low to avoid destabilisation of small ELMs. This requirement implies a systematic reduction of pedestal pressure of typically 30\% compared to unmitigated ELMy H-mode in otherwise similar plasmas. 4. The edge safety factor q95q_{95} lies within a certain window. Within the range probed so far, q95=3.5−4.2q_{95}=3.5-4.2, one such window, q95=3.57−3.95q_{95}=3.57-3.95 has been identified. Within the range of plasma rotation encountered so far, no apparent threshold of plasma rotation for ELM suppression is found. This includes cases with large cross field electron flow in the entire pedestal region, for which two-fluid MHD models predict that the resistive plasma response to the applied MP is shielded

    Energetic-Particle-Induced Geodesic Acoustic Mode

    Full text link

    Upgrade of Reflectometry Profile and Fluctuation Measurements in Alcator C-Mod

    Get PDF

    Beam ion losses due to energetic particle geodesic acoustic modes

    Get PDF
    We report the first experimental observations of fast-ion loss in a tokamak due to energetic particle driven geodesic acoustic modes (EGAMs). A fast-ion loss detector installed on the DIII-D tokamak observes bursts of beam ion losses coherent with the EGAM frequency. The EGAM activity results in a significant loss of beam ions, comparable to the first orbit losses. The pitch angles and energies of the measured fast-ion losses agree with predictions from a full orbit simulation code SPIRAL, which includes scattering and slowing-down.U.S. Department of Energy DE-FC02-04ER 54698, SC-G903402, DE-AC02-09CH1146
    • …
    corecore