577 research outputs found
Local magnetic divertor for control of the plasma-limiter interaction in a tokamak
An experiment is described in which plasma flow to a tokamak limiter is controlled through the
use of a local toroidal divertor coil mounted inside the limiter itself. This coil produces a local
perturbed field B_C approximately equal to the local unperturbed toroidal field B_T ≃ 3 kG, such
that when B_C adds to B_T the field lines move into the limiter and the local plasma flow to it
increases by a factor as great as 1.6, and when B_C subtracts from B_T the field lines move away
from the limiter and the local plasma flow to it decreases by as much as a factor of 4. A simple
theoretical model is used to interpret these results. Since these changes occur without significantly
affecting global plasma confinement, such a control scheme may be useful for optimizing the
performance of pumped limiters
Dynamics of high energy runaway electrons in the Oak Ridge tokamak
Runaway electrons produced during normal discharges in the Oak Ridge Tokamak (ORMAK) have been studied with a hard x-ray diagnostic system along with most of the other diagnostics available on this machine. It is found that runaways can attain maximum energies of up to 10 MeV and be contained over times of typically 50 msec. A simple physical model is proposed that is consistent with most of the observed high energy runaway phenomena. Some properties of the overall runaway distribtion generated in tokamaks are inferred from these results and are discussed in terms of runaway generation, acceleration, and transport
Temperature fluctuations and heat transport in the edge regions of a tokamak
Electron temperature fluctuations have been investigated in the edge region of the Caltech research tokamak [S. J. Zweben and R. W. Gould, Nucl. Fusion 25, 171 (1985)], and an upper limit to this fluctuation level was found at Te/Te <~ 15%. This measurement, together with previous measurements of density and electric and magnetic field fluctuations, allows a unique comparison of the heat transport resulting from three basic turbulent mechanisms: (1) heat flux from the particle flux resulting from microscopic density and electric field fluctuations; (2) thermal conduction resulting from microscopic temperature and electric field fluctuations; and (3) thermal conduction resulting from microscopic magnetic field fluctuations. The measurements indicate that, in the edge regions, the electron heat transport caused by the measured turbulence-induced particle flux is comparable to or greater than that caused by the thermal conduction associated with the electron temperature and electric field fluctuations, and is significantly greater than that resulting from the measured magnetic fluctuations. This electron heat loss caused by the plasma turbulence is found to be an important electron energy loss mechanism in the edge regions
Alpha particle losses from Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor deuterium-tritium plasmas
Because alpha particle losses can have a significant influence on tokamak reactor viability, the loss of deuterium-tritium alpha particles from the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR) has been measured under a wide range of conditions. In TFTR, first orbit loss and stochastic toroidal field ripple diffusion are always present. Other losses can arise due to magnetohydrodynamic instabilities or due to waves in the ion cyclotron range of frequencies. No alpha particle losses have yet been seen due to collective instabilities driven by alphas. Ion Bernstein waves can drive large losses of fast ions from TFTR, and details of those losses support one element of the alpha energy channeling scenario
Comparison of velocimetry techniques for turbulent structures in gas-puff imaging data
Recent analysis of Gas Puff Imaging (GPI) data from Alcator C-Mod found blob velocities with a modified tracking time delay estimation (TDE). These results disagree with velocity analysis performed using direct Fourier methods. In this paper, the two analysis methods are compared. The implementations of these methods are explained, and direct comparisons using the same GPI data sets are presented to highlight the discrepancies in measured velocities. In order to understand the discrepancies, we present a code that generates synthetic sequences of images that mimic features of the experimental GPI images, with user-specified input values for structure (blob) size and velocity. This allows quantitative comparison of the TDE and Fourier analysis methods, which reveals their strengths and weaknesses. We found that the methods agree for structures of any size as long as all structures move at the same velocity and disagree when there is significant nonlinear dispersion or when structures appear to move in opposite directions. Direct Fourier methods used to extract poloidal velocities give incorrect results when there is a significant radial velocity component and are subject to the barber pole effect. Tracking TDE techniques give incorrect velocity measurements when there are features moving at significantly different speeds or in different directions within the same field of view. Finally, we discuss the limitations and appropriate use of each of methods and applications to the relationship between blob size and velocity.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (1122374
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Measurements of escaping alphas in the TFTR DT experiments
Alpha particle loss to the wall of TFTR has been measured during the initial TFTR DT run period. These measurements were made with the same lost alpha scintillator detector system used previously for DD fusion products, except for a switch of the scintillator material from zinc sulfide (P31) to yttrium aluminate (P46) to insure a linear response up to the maximum alpha flux expected in DT. The alpha loss signals in DT are {approx} 100 times larger than the DD fusion product loss signals, as expected from the neutron rates and the relative sensitivity to DT vs. DD fusion products
NSTX tangential divertor camera
Strong magnetic field shear around the divertor x-point is numerically predicted to lead to strong spatial asymmetries in turbulence driven particle fluxes. To visualize the turbulence and associated impurity line emission near the lower x-point region, a new tangential observation port has been recently installed on NSTX. A reentrant sapphire window with a moveable in-vessel mirror images the divertor region from the center stack out to R 80 cm and views the x-point for most plasma configurations. A coherent fiber optic bundle transmits the image through a remotely selected filter to a fast camera, for example a 40500 frames/sec Photron CCD camera. A gas puffer located in the lower inboard divertor will localize the turbulence in the region near the x-point. Edge fluid and turbulent codes UEDGE and BOUT will be used to interpret impurity and deuterium emission fluctuation measurements in the divertor
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