Turbulence wavenumber spectra and comparisons to theory using an optimized Doppler backscattering system in DIII-D*
POSTER
Abstract
Measurement of turbulent wavenumber spectra provides a tool to both characterize the plasma turbulence as well as test simulations and theory. The recently validated UCLA Doppler backscattering (DBS) system enables previously inaccessible measurements (for DBS on DIII-D) of higher wavenumber density fluctuations associated with turbulent transport. DBS as a plasma diagnostic measures wavenumber-resolved density turbulence fluctuation levels, ñ, localized E×B velocity, radial electric field, and plasma flows. The new DBS system has demonstrated measurements of kñ up to 20 cm-1 or kñρs ≤ 10. This wavenumber range is relevant to a broad range of instabilities of interest including KBM, ITG, MTM, TEM, and ETG. The measurement locations are in the radial range ρ = 0.5–1.0. These measurements produce spectral shapes (power vs fluctuation frequency) that, when obtained as a function of the wavenumber, allow us to characterize the potential turbulence instability modes. These experimental measurements can be further investigated and compared with the theoretical predictions from linear and/or non-linear simulation codes.
Presenters
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Julius Damba
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
Authors
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Julius Damba
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
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Quinn Pratt
University of California, Los Angeles
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Rongjie Hong
University of California, Los Angeles, University of California Los Angela's
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Valerian H Hall-Chen
Institute of High Performance Computing, Singapore 138632, Singapore
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Terry L Rhodes
University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA