Compact, Portable Ultrashort Pulse Reflectometry (USPR) Diagnostic
POSTER
Abstract
Ultrashort Pulse Reflectometry (USPR) is a plasma diagnostic technique involving the propagation of ultrashort duration (~few nsec) chirps which contain frequency components spanning large portions of the plasma density profile. Upon reflection, each frequency component reflects from a distinct density layer. The reflected wave packet is down-converted and passed through a multi-channel filter bank, with time-of-flight (TOF) measurements made on each of the filtered wave packets. A highly portable version of this diagnostic is being fabricated for electron density profile measurements on compact, short duration devices such as spheromaks and FRCs. At the heart of the 48 channel system spanning 26.5 to 75 GHz is a field programmable gate array (FPGA) that acquires and processes data collected on each pulsed discharge. Details will be provided about the USPR diagnostic which will be installed and commissioned on the HIT-SIU device in Fall, 2021.
Publication: "A next generation ultra short pulse reflectometry (USPR) diagnostic", Review of Scientific Instruments 92, 034714 (2021)
Presenters
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Calvin W Domier
University of California, Davis
Authors
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Calvin W Domier
University of California, Davis
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R J Pereira
University of California, Davis
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Jon Dannenberg
University of California, Davis
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Jordan Steer-Furderer
University of California, Davis
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Yilun Zhu
University of California, Davis
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N C Luhmann
University of California, Davis