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Correlation electron cyclotron emission measurements in the HSX stellarator

POSTER

Abstract

Long-wavelength kρs < 1.5 radiation temperature fluctuations are measured within the mid-radius of the Helically Symmetric eXperiment (HSX) stellarator using a 16-channel CECE radiometer. Despite low single-pass optical depth, the X2 emission may be treated as blackbody under certain conditions present in HSX, and CECE measures turbulent electron temperature fluctuations. Outside the ECRH deposition region (r/a > 0.2), fluctuation amplitudes increase with normalized electron temperature gradient. This increase in amplitude coincides with broadening of the fluctuation frequency spectrum at higher normalized electron temperature gradient. To model the core turbulence in HSX, flux-tube gyrokinetic simulations have been performed with the GENE code. Linear simulations suggest that trapped electron mode is the dominant long-wavelength instability. Nonlinear simulations predict that electron temperature fluctuations increase with normalized electron temperature gradient, consistent with CECE measurements. For more detailed comparisons, a synthetic CECE diagnostic has been developed to process the gyrokinetic simulation data and account for diagnostic effects on the temperature fluctuation signal. A comparison of a synthetic and experimental CECE frequency spectrum will be presented.

Presenters

  • Luquant Singh

    University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin

Authors

  • Luquant Singh

    University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin

  • Konstantin M Likin

    University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Matthijs R Wezeman

    Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands

  • MJ Pueschel

    Eindhoven University of Technology; Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research, Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research, 5612 AJ Eindhoven, The Netherlands; Eindhoven University of Technology, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands, Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research, The Netherlands

  • Gavin M Weir

    Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics

  • Gavin W Held

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Benjamin J Faber

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin

  • Chris C Hegna

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, Type One Energy, University of Wisconsin-Madison