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Bifurcated helical core equilibrium states in tokamaks.

Authors :
Cooper, W. A.
Chapman, I. T.
Schmitz, O.
Turnbull, A. D.
Tobias, B. J.
Lazarus, E. A.
Turco, F.
Lanctot, M. J.
Evans, T. E.
Graves, J. P.
Brunetti, D.
Pfefferlé, D.
Reimerdes, H.
Sauter, O.
Halpern, F. D.
Tran, T. M.
Coda, S.
Duval, B. P.
Labit, B.
Pochelon, A.
Source :
Nuclear Fusion. 2013, Vol. 53 Issue 7, p1-8. 8p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Tokamaks with weak to moderate reversed central shear in which the minimum inverse rotational transform (safety factor) qmin is in the neighbourhood of unity can trigger bifurcated magnetohydrodynamic equilibrium states, one of which is similar to a saturated ideal internal kink mode. Peaked prescribed pressure profiles reproduce the 'snake' structures observed in many tokamaks which has led to a novel explanation of the snake as a bifurcated equilibrium state. Snake equilibrium structures are computed in simulations of the tokamak `a configuration variable (TCV), DIII-D and mega amp spherical torus (MAST) tokamaks. The internal helical deformations only weakly modulate the plasma-vacuum interface which is more sensitive to ripple and resonant magnetic perturbations. On the other hand, the external perturbations do not alter the helical core deformation in a significant manner. The confinement of fast particles in MAST simulations deteriorate with the amplitude of the helical core distortion. These threedimensional bifurcated solutions constitute a paradigm shift that motivates the applications of tools developed for stellarator research in tokamak physics investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00295515
Volume :
53
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Nuclear Fusion
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
90261862
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0029-5515/53/7/073021