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New measurements of core density collapse dynamics in the Large Helical Device

POSTER

Abstract

The core density collapse (CDC) is a sudden loss of plasma beta that affects super dense core (SDC) plasmas in the Large Helical Device (LHD). The CDC constrains achievable beta in LHD and may represent a more general beta and/or density limit for stellarators. MHD modeling points to destabilization of high-n ballooning modes as a trigger for collapse. The CDC’s high density and sub-millisecond timescale make it challenging to measure the event’s dynamics. Novel measurements using a 20 kHz Thomson scattering system reveal rapid event dynamics that include a narrow, short-lived core electron temperature feature, and narrowing of the density profile just before collapse. Observation is also reported of a magnetic precursor, coherent with previously-observed line-integrated density fluctuations that precede CDC by up to 1 ms. This work expands the known set of phenomena associated with CDCs and may illuminate how the edge instability couples to the plasma core and triggers its collapse.

Presenters

  • R. Sassella

Authors

  • R. Sassella

  • Daniel J Den Hartog

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Adelle M Wright

    University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • John S Sarff

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Justin M Frazier

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Yuki Takemura

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Hisamichi Funaba

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Naoki Kenmochi

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Kenji Tanaka

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Hiyori Uehara

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Hiroyuki Yamaguchi

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Ryo Yasuhara

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Toshiki Kinoshita

    Kyushu University

  • Yasuhiro Suzuki

    Hiroshima Univ