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Exploration of Mode Frequency Control and Observation of Multiple Independent Modes on HBT-EP

POSTER

Abstract

This poster explores internal mode structures with a poloidal array of 64 Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) diodes (15 ≤ Eγ ≲ 104 eV) on the HBT-EP tokamak. A combined-diagnostic Singular Value Decomposition is used to identify coherent signatures across optical and magnetic signals. One application of this study is the identification and frequency control of an internal emissive 2/1 mode structure locked to an edge magnetic 3/1 mode structure. A non-iterative tomographic scheme and projection matrix is employed to extract the phase of this feature, on an NVIDIA GPU in an 8μs cycle. HBT-EP’s 4×10 poloidal and toroidal control coils are actuated with a pre-defined surface ψ3/1 to control the rotation frequency. Compared to phase tracking with Mirnov probes, similar ∆fmhd of roughly ±30% is observed. A second application is the observation of multiple independent modes. The combined diagnostics show 2D profiles associated with the progression of a sawtooth event: an internal 1/1-like mode precedes the β-collapse, which in turn destabilize an edge mode. Separately, a high frequency 3/2 mode is observed independent of the dominant 3/1 mode. The correlation in time of these mode amplitudes is discussed.

Publication: R. Chandra et al, "An Optical-Input Maximum Likelihood Estimation Feedback System Demonstrated on Tokamak Horizontal Equilibrium Control", Fusion Engineering and Design, Submitted for Review 12th April, 2022

Presenters

  • Rian N Chandra

    Columbia University

Authors

  • Rian N Chandra

    Columbia University

  • Jeffrey P Levesque

    Columbia University

  • Boting Li

    Columbia University

  • Alex R Saperstein

    Columbia University

  • Yumou Wei

    Columbia University

  • David A Arnold

    Columbia University

  • Nigel J DaSilva

    Columbia University

  • Michael E Mauel

    Columbia University

  • Gerald A Navratil

    Columbia University

  • Christopher J Hansen

    University of Washington