Observation of trapped-electron-mode microturbulence in reversed field pinch plasmas
Author(s) -
J. Duff,
Zach Williams,
D. L. Brower,
B. E. Chapman,
W. X. Ding,
M. J. Pueschel,
J. S. Sarff,
P. W. Terry
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
physics of plasmas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1089-7674
pISSN - 1070-664X
DOI - 10.1063/1.5010198
Subject(s) - physics , reversed field pinch , microturbulence , plasma , electron , atomic physics , tokamak , tearing , magnetohydrodynamics , electron temperature , pinch , wavelength , instability , electron density , magnetic field , optics , mechanics , nuclear physics , quantum mechanics , thermodynamics
Density fluctuations in the large-density-gradient region of improved confinement Madison Symmetric Torus reversed field pinch (RFP) plasmas exhibit multiple features that are characteristic of the trapped-electron mode (TEM). Core transport in conventional RFP plasmas is governed by magnetic stochasticity stemming from multiple long-wavelength tearing modes. Using inductive current profile control, these tearing modes are reduced, and global confinement is increased to that expected for comparable tokamak plasmas. Under these conditions, new short-wavelength fluctuations distinct from global tearing modes appear in the spectrum at a frequency of f ∼ 50 kHz, which have normalized perpendicular wavenumbers k⊥ρs≲0.2 and propagate in the electron diamagnetic drift direction. They exhibit a critical-gradient threshold, and the fluctuation amplitude increases with the local electron density gradient. These characteristics are consistent with predictions from gyrokinetic analysis using the Gene code, including ...
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