Positive potential-side global ion heating during high guide field reconnection in the TS-6 merging spherical tokamak formation experiment
POSTER
Abstract
Here we report our new finding of positive potential-side global ion heating during high guide field reconnection in the TS-6 merging spherical tokamak formation experiment. Particle accleration and heating during guide field reconnection is one of the major topic of reconnection studies and the contribution of the quadrapole potential structure and inplane electric field are investigated in many laboratory experiments and numerical simulations. Previously most of studies reported that ions are heated at the lower potential-side of the quadrapole potential region by in-plane electric field Ep and it was proposed that the increment of ion temperature Ti is proportional to the potential drop: △Ti ∝ △Φ. However, our full-2D global ion Doppler tomography imaging of Ti profile revealed that Ti is actually higher in the positive potential side and the structure gets flipped when toroidal field (Bt) polarity is changed. In the sufficiently high guide field condition (Bt ~ 5Bp), inductive/reconnection electric field Et made a major contribution to ion acceleration as well as electron ones. Around the quadrapole potential region, ions just pass through by E×B drift and △Φ ~ 0 on the orbit. Then, the major contribution comes from parallel electric field E// = E·B/|B|. The combination of Et and Bt forms large negative parallel electric field and ions are accelerated to the positive potential-side. After the end of merging, in-plane heat transport process equilibrated the characteristic structure and finally globally hollow ion temperature profile is formed. It is sustained by better plasma confinement by guide field (κi///κi⊥ ~ 2(ωciτii)2 >> 1) in the quasi-steady phase after merging and successfully bridging the double-peak heating characteristics reported in many merging experiments such as MAST and TS-3.
Publication: [1] H. Tanabe et al., Nucl. Fusion 61 106027 (2021)
Presenters
-
Hiroshi Tanabe
Univ of Tokyo
Authors
-
Hiroshi Tanabe
Univ of Tokyo
-
Haruaki Tanaka
Univ of Tokyo
-
Yunhan Cai
Univ of Tokyo, Univ. of Tokyo
-
Ryo Someya
Univ of Tokyo, Univ. of Tokyo, University of Tokyo
-
Chio Z Cheng
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
-
Michiaki Inomoto
Univ of Tokyo
-
Yasushi Ono
Univ of Tokyo