Evolution of plasma density structures during sawtooth events in DIII-D

POSTER

Abstract

The sawtooth crash in fusion plasmas leads to a fast drop in core electron temperature, and it may be associated with rapid and explosive plasma phenomena in solar and space plasmas. Several models have been proposed for the fast temperature evolution during sawteeth, including fast magnetic reconnection provided by two-fluid effects, or the plasmoid instability, or growth of secondary MHD instabilities such as ballooning instabilities. Experiments were conducted at DIII-D through the Frontier Science program where the Beam Emission Spectroscopy (BES) system was used for 2-D localized density measurements at the sawtooth region during sawtooth events in DIII-D to understand the role of these mechanisms. We obtained 2-D time-domain movies of the evolution of $\frac{\delta n}{n}$ during sawteeth through 1) cross calibration of the time response and gain for each channel; and 2) careful subtraction of background and plasma-edge-light to isolate the density response in the plasma core. We compare the BES density observations with 3-D mode structures determined by external magnetic probes. Techniques of our analysis are presented and results over numerous shots are analyzed and compared to predictions for the competing models.

Authors

  • D. Liu

    Princeton University

  • W Fox

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, PPPL

  • S. Bose

    PPPL, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Z. Yan

    University of Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin Madison, U. Wisc, University of Wisconsin-Madison, UW, Madison

  • G.R. McKee

    University of Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison, UW, Madison, UW-Madison

  • A. Goodman

    Princeton University

  • Hantao Ji

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, PPPL, Princeton University and PPPL

  • V. Igochine

    IPP

  • Y. Zhu

    University of California, Davis, UC, Davis

  • S. Jardin

    PPPL

  • N. Ferraro

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, PPPL, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton, NJ