1. A 1D Lyman-alpha profile camera for plasma edge neutral studies on the DIII-D tokamak.
- Author
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Rosenthal, A. M., Hughes, J. W., Bortolon, A., Laggner, F. M., Wilks, T. M., Vieira, R., Leccacorvi, R., Marmar, E., Nagy, A., Freeman, C., and Mauzey, D.
- Subjects
PINHOLE cameras ,SURFACE brightness (Astronomy) ,HYDROGEN isotopes ,CAMERAS ,PLASMA boundary layers ,THREE-dimensional printing ,PRODUCTION engineering - Abstract
A one dimensional, absolutely calibrated pinhole camera system was installed on the DIII-D tokamak to measure edge Lyman-alpha (Ly-α) emission from hydrogen isotopes, which can be used to infer neutral density and ionization rate profiles. The system is composed of two cameras, each providing a toroidal fan of 20 lines of sight, viewing the plasma edge on the inboard and outboard side of DIII-D. The cameras' views lie in a horizontal plane 77 cm below the midplane. At its tangency radius, each channel provides a radial resolution of ∼2 cm full width at half maximum (FWHM) with a total coverage of 22 cm. Each camera consists of a rectangular pinhole, Ly-α reflective mirror, narrow-band Ly-α transmission filter, and a 20 channel AXUV photodetector. The combined mirror and transmission filter have a FWHM of 5 nm, centered near the Ly-α wavelength of 121.6 nm and is capable of rejecting significant, parasitic carbon-III (C-III) emission from intrinsic plasma impurities. To provide a high spatial resolution measurement in a compact footprint, the camera utilizes advanced engineering and manufacturing techniques including 3D printing, high stability mirror mounts, and a novel alignment procedure. Absolutely calibrated, spatially resolved Ly-α brightness measurements utilize a bright, isolated line with low parasitic surface reflections and enable quantitative comparison to modeling to study divertor neutral leakage, main chamber fueling, and radial particle transport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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