1. Formation and stability of impurity "snakes" in tokamak plasmas.
- Author
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Delgado-Aparicio L, Sugiyama L, Granetz R, Gates DA, Rice JE, Reinke ML, Bitter M, Fredrickson E, Gao C, Greenwald M, Hill K, Hubbard A, Hughes JW, Marmar E, Pablant N, Podpaly Y, Scott S, Wilson R, Wolfe S, and Wukitch S
- Abstract
New observations of the formation and dynamics of long-lived impurity-induced helical "snake" modes in tokamak plasmas have recently been carried out on Alcator C-Mod. The snakes form as an asymmetry in the impurity ion density that undergoes a seamless transition from a small helically displaced density to a large crescent-shaped helical structure inside q<1, with a regularly sawtoothing core. The observations show that the conditions for the formation and persistence of a snake cannot be explained by plasma pressure alone. Instead, many features arise naturally from nonlinear interactions in a 3D MHD model that separately evolves the plasma density and temperature.
- Published
- 2013
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