The Role of Axisymmetric Reconnection Events in JET Discharges with Extreme Shear Reversal
Author(s) -
B. Stratton,
J. Breslau,
R. Budny,
S.C. Jardin,
W. Park,
H. R. Strauss,
L. Zakharov,
B. Alper,
В.В. Дроздов,
N. Hawkes,
S. Reyes-Cortes
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/792848
Subject(s) - physics , magnetohydrodynamics , current (fluid) , bootstrap current , mechanics , sawtooth wave , magnetic reconnection , toroid , current density , jet (fluid) , plasma , rotational symmetry , current sheet , nuclear physics , thermodynamics , quantum mechanics , computer science , computer vision
Injection of Lower Hybrid Heating and Current Drive into the current ramp-up phase of Joint European Torus (JET) discharges can produce extremely reversed q-profiles characterized by a core region of very small or zero current density (within Motional Stark Effect diagnostic measurement errors) and q(subscript min) > 1. T(subscript e)-profiles show sawtooth-like collapses and the presence of an internal transport barrier. Accurate equilibrium reconstructions of these discharges are obtained using the ESC code, which was recently extended to allow equilibrium reconstructions in which a free boundary solver determines the plasma boundary and a fixed boundary solver provides the magnetic geometry and current density profile. The core current density does not appear to go negative, although current diffusion calculations indicate that sufficient non-inductive current drive to cause this is present. This is explained by nonlinear resistive MHD simulations in toroidal geometry which predict that these discharges undergo n=0 reconnection events (axisymmetric sawteeth) that redistribute the current to hold the core current density near zero
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