Synchrotron and collisional damping effects on runaway electron distributions

ORAL

Abstract

Validated models of runaway electron (RE) dissipation are required to confidently approve safe ITER ${Q=10}$ operation. DIII-D experiments using quiescent REs are exploring the importance of synchrotron and collisional damping terms to RE dissipation. New time and energy-resolved measurements of RE bremsstrahlung hard X-ray (HXR) emission reveal stark differences between high and low energy REs as damping terms are varied. Previously reported anomalously high RE dissipation only applies to low energy REs. At high energy (where synchrotron effects are strongest) low synchrotron damping cases reach higher peak RE energy despite weaker particle confinement. Low-energy RE decay is observed concurrently with high-energy RE growth. RE dissipation models predict bump-on-tail distributions whose properties depend on the damping terms. Measured HXR spectra are very broad, as expected for bump-on-tail distributions.

Authors

  • C. Paz-Soldan

    GA, General Atomics, ORNL, General Atomics (GA)

  • N. Eidietis

    General Atomics, GA

  • D. Pace

    General Atomics, GA

  • C. Cooper

    ORAU, GA

  • D. Shiraki

    ORNL

  • N. Commaux

    ORNL

  • E. Hollmann

    UCSD

  • R.A. Moyer

    UCSD

  • R. Granetz

    MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT

  • O. Embreus

    Chalmers U

  • T. Fulop

    Chalmers U

  • A. Stahl

    Chalmers U

  • G. Wilkie

    Chalmers U

  • P. Aleynikov

    IPP

  • D.P. Brennan

    PPPL

  • C. Liu

    Princeton Plasma Phys Laboratory, Princeton University, PPPL