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8–13 Oct 2012
US/Pacific timezone

EX/8-1: 3D Plasma Response to Magnetic Field Structure in the Large Helical Device

12 Oct 2012, 08:30
20m
Indigo Ball Room

Indigo Ball Room

Oral Presentation EXS - Magnetic Confinement Experiments: Stability 3D Equilibrium & High Beta Physics

Speaker

Mr Yasuhiro Suzuki (Japan)

Description

In the LHD experiments, the volume averaged beta value was achieved to 5% in the quasi-steady state. For such high-beta plasmas, the change of the magnetic field structure is expected. Since the magnetic field of the LHD is intrinsically 3D structure, the plasma current flowing along 3D field lines drives perturbed field to break nested flux surfaces for the vacuum field, so-called the "3D plasma response". This is an important and critical issue in stellarator and heliotron researches. Understanding of the nature of stochastic field lines is also a critical issue for application of the Resonant Magnetic Perturbation in tokamaks. To study theoretically the impact of 3D plasma response to the magnetic field, 3D MHD equilibrium was studied using a 3D MHD equilibrium calculation code without assumption of nested flux surfaces. In that study, magnetic field lines in the peripheral region become stochastic and expanding due to increasing beta then the plasma volume in the inside of the last closed flux surface shrinks. However, the connection length of stochastic field lines is still longer than the electron mean free path. That means the change of the effective plasma boundary by the 3D plasma response. To study the 3D plasma response, the radial electric field, Er, is measured in the peripheral region. The positive electric field appears in the region and that suggests the boundary between opened and closed field lines. The position of appearing positive Er is the outside of the vacuum boundary. A 3D MHD modeling predicts the expanding of the effective plasma boundary by the 3D plasma response. The position of appearing strong Er is almost comparable to expanded plasma boundary of the modeling. That is, the 3D plasma response is identified in the LHD experiments.

Country or International Organization of Primary Author

Japan

Primary author

Co-authors

Prof. Hiroshi Yamada (National Institute for Fusion Science) Prof. Katsumi Ida (National Institute for Fusion Science) Prof. Kazunobu Nagasaki (Institute of Advanced Energy, Kyoto University) Dr Kenichi Nagaoka (National Institute for Fusion Science) Dr Kensaku Kamiya (Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Naka Fusion Institute) Prof. Kiyomasa Watanabe (National Institute for Fusion Science) Dr Kunihiro Ogawa (Depertment of Energy Engneering and Science, Nagoya University) Dr Mikirou Yoshinuma (National Institute for Fusion Science) Dr Ryosuke Seki (National Institute for Fusion Science) Dr Satoru Sakakibara (National Institute for Fusion Science) Dr Satoshi Ohdachi (National Institute for Fusion Science) Dr Shigeru Inagaki (Research Institute for Applied Mechanics, Kyushu University) Dr Yoshiro Narushima (National Institute for Fusion Science) Mr Yuki Takemura (Graduate University for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI)

Presentation materials