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Realization of a Gas-Puff Imaging diagnostic on W7-X

POSTER

Abstract

A Gas-Puff Imaging system designed to provide 2-d imaging of fluctuations on turbulence time-scales at the outboard edge of W7-X has been installed and is being commissioned for operation at the start of the next run campaign. The system will be used to study turbulence and filament dynamics in the SOL and in the magnetic islands, present as features of the island divertor configuration. Imaging of a ~78 x 38 mm region with 16 x 8 pixel resolution at ~1MHz framerates provides the capability to measure features with kperp in the range from ~0.04 to ~5 cm-1., with kperp ρs ~0.1.The system features high-throughput light collection by re-entrant optics imaging directly onto the camera, and a pop-up turning mirror that provides sight lines to the gas-puff region that are within ~10o of the local field lines. The novel gas-puffer features 2 vertically-stacked nozzles with “converging-diverging” cross-sections to provide improved collimation of the puffed gas. Because better collimation improves the spatial resolution and increases the chord brightnesses, careful measurements of the gas-puff cloud were made. An overview of the system, its expected capabilities, and the gas cloud measurements will be presented.

Presenters

  • James L Terry

    MIT PSFC, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI, MIT-PSFC, MIT Plasma Science Fusion Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

Authors

  • James L Terry

    MIT PSFC, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI, MIT-PSFC, MIT Plasma Science Fusion Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Adrian von Stechow

    Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics, Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik, EURATOM Association, Greifswald, Germany

  • Seung Gyou G Baek

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI, MIT-PSFC, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Sean B Ballinger

    MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT-PSFC, MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Centre

  • Carsten Killer

    Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics, Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik

  • Olaf Grulke

    Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics