Species mix, magnetic field strength, and distribution function dependence of instabilities near the ion cyclotron range of frequencies
Abstract
Frontier Science experiments on the DIII-D tokamak explored energetic ion-driven instabilities in the magnetosphere by studying related phenomena in tokamak plasmas: high-frequency Alfvén eigenmodes and ion cyclotron emission (ICE). The instabilities' dependence on plasma ion species mix, magnetic field strength, and energetic ion species and their phase space distribution was explored. Ten different beam-ion distributions were studied by varying: species (H+/D+) , direction (co- vs. counter-current), energy (81/55 kV), and radial location (on- vs. off-axis) of the energetic ions at birth. The background plasma was D+ with H+ and 3He++ in different mixtures throughout the experiment. Prominent ICE harmonics from co-injecting beams changed with increasing H+, whereas ICE from counter-injecting beams is not similarly affected. The instabilities were measured with toroidal magnetic loops digitized at 200 MSamples/s. Additional loops were recently installed and enable more detailed measurements which are used to characterize modes observed in pure D+ shots recreated from the Frontier experiment.
Work supported by US DOE under DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-SC0018270, and DE-SC0011810.- Publication:
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APS Division of Plasma Physics Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- 2020
- Bibcode:
- 2020APS..DPPG19014D