Study of TEMs and Quasi-Coherent Modes via Synthetic and Experimental Reflectometer Measurements at the HSX Stellarator*
ORAL
Abstract
Transport in the Helically Symmetric Experiment (HSX), a quasi-helically symmetric stellarator with reduced neoclassical transport, is dominated by trapped electron mode (TEM) turbulence. A monostatic perpendicular incidence reflectometer is used to measure density fluctuations and study TEMs in HSX [1]. A full-wave synthetic diagnostic using CUWA [2] has been implemented to model the HSX reflectometer to determine the capabilities of the diagnostic and directly compare experiment and simulation data. Findings from the synthetic diagnostic are presented here. The results show that the reflectometer is sensitive to poloidal wavenumbers under 1.5 cm-1 and radial wavenumbers under 4 cm-1, with very little dependence on local curvature, density gradient, or probing frequency. The reflectometer outputs scale linearly with density fluctuation level in the physically relevant range, and this scaling is characterized to relate reflectometer signal to electron density fluctuation levels. Synthetic diagnostic measurements of GENE-simulated density fluctuations are compared with experiment, with both showing strong coherent mode activity and supporting the link between observed quasi-coherent modes and the large-scale fluctuations seen in gyrokinetic simulations of HSX.
[1] X. Han et al., Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 67, 045011 (2025)
[2] P. Aleynikov et al., Comput. Phys. Commun. 241, 40-47 (2019)
[1] X. Han et al., Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 67, 045011 (2025)
[2] P. Aleynikov et al., Comput. Phys. Commun. 241, 40-47 (2019)
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Presenters
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Henrique Oliveira Miller Hillebrecht
University of Wisconsin - Madison
Authors
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Henrique Oliveira Miller Hillebrecht
University of Wisconsin - Madison
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Michael Jeffrey Gerard
Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics
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Michael James Richardson
University of Wisconsin - Madison
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Xiang Han
University of Wisconsin - Madison
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Gavin Wayne Held
University of Wisconsin - Madison
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Gavin M Weir
Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics
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Benjamin J Faber
University of Wisconsin - Madison
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M.J. Pueschel
Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research
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Benedikt Geiger
University of Wisconsin - Madison