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Pellet imaging techniques in the ASDEX tokamak.

Authors :
Wurden, G. A.
Büchl, K.
Hofmann, J.
Lang, R.
Loch, R.
Rudyj, A.
Sandmann, W.
Source :
Review of Scientific Instruments. Nov90, Vol. 61 Issue 11, p3604. 5p.
Publication Year :
1990

Abstract

As part of a USDOE/ASDEX collaboration, a detailed examination of pellet ablation in ASDEX with a variety of diagnostics has allowed a better understanding of a number of features of hydrogen ice pellet ablation in a plasma. In particular, fast-gated photos with an intensified Xybion CCD video camera allow in situ velocity measurements of the pellet as it penetrates the plasma. With time resolution of typically 100 ns and exposures every 50 μs, the evolution of each pellet in a multipellet ASDEX tokamak plasma discharge can be followed. When the pellet cloud track has striations, the light intensity profile through the cloud is hollow (dark near the pellet), whereas at the beginning or near the end of the pellet trajectory the track is typically smooth (without striations) and has a gaussian-peaked light emission profile. New, single pellet Stark broadened Dα, Dβ, and Dγ spectra, obtained with a tangentially viewing scanning mirror/spectrometer with Reticon array readout, are consistent with cloud densities of 2×1017 cm-3 or higher in the regions of strongest light emission. A spatially resolved array of Dα detectors shows that the light variations during the pellet ablation are not caused solely by a modulation of the incoming energy flux as the pellet crosses rational q surfaces, but instead are a result of dynamic, nonstationary, ablation process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00346748
Volume :
61
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Review of Scientific Instruments
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9786105
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1141579