The Effects of Neutral Damping on Resistive Wall Mode Physics

POSTER

Abstract

The physics of the dissipation mechanism responsible for rotational stabilization of the resistive wall mode (RWM) is an object of intense current research. On HBT-EP, there is experimental evidence that edge neutral damping is a significant dissipation mechanism that affects tearing mode behavior [1]. To quantify the possible effect of neutral damping on RWM physics, we are constructing a 16-channel linear photo-detector array to measure D$_{\alpha }$ emission and its fluctuations. These measurements will be used in conjunction with a 1D space, 2D velocity kinetic transport model of the atomic and molecular deuterium penetration to quantify neutral profiles within the plasma [2]. Ongoing efforts to measure the neutral damping contribution to RWM rotational stabilization utilizing the measured D$_{\alpha }{\rm g}$ profiles to estimate the edge neutral density will be presented. *Supported by U.S. DOE Grant DE-FG02-86ER53222 1 E. D. Taylor, \textit{et al}., \textit{Phys. Plasmas} \textbf{9}, 3938 (2002) 2 B. LaBombard, MIT PSFC RR-00-9, (2000).

Authors

  • R. James

    US Coast Guard Academy/Stevens Institute of Technology

  • K. Becker

    Stevens Institute of Technology

  • J.M. Hanson

  • M.E. Mauel

    Columbia University

  • D.A. Mauer

  • Gerald A. Navratil

    Columbia U., Columbia University

  • Thomas Pedersen

  • N. Stillits

    Columbia University