Tilting mode in field-reversed configurations
Abstract
Field reversed configurations (FRCs) experimentally have exhibited remarkable stability on the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) timescale, despite numerous MHD calculations showing FRCs to be unstable. It is easy to believe that local modes are stabilized by finite Larmor radius (FLR) effects, but more puzzling is the apparent stability of FRCs against global modes, where one would expect FLR effects to be less important. The tilting mode, which MHD has shown to be a rapidly growing global mode was studied. The tilting mode in FRCs is driven by the pressure gradient, and magnetic compression and field line bending are the stabilizing forces. A schematic of the evolution of the tilting mode is shown. The tilting mode is considered dangerous, because it would lead to rapid tearing across the separatrix. Unlike spheromaks, the tilting mode in FRCs has a separatrix that is fixed in space, so that the model is strictly internal.
- Publication:
-
Presented at the US-Japan Workshop on Compact Toroids
- Pub Date:
- 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982coto.work...19S
- Keywords:
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- Attitude (Inclination);
- Magnetohydrodynamic Stability;
- Plasma Equilibrium;
- Reverse Field Pinch;
- Magnetic Compression;
- Pressure Gradients;
- Plasma Physics