2006 48th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics 
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2006;
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Session GI2: Advances in Plasma Simulation I
9:30 AM–12:30 PM, 
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
Philadelphia Marriott Downtown 
Room: Grand Salon CDE
Chair: John Cary, Tech X
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.DPP.GI2.1
Abstract: GI2.00001 : 3D Modeling of the Sawtooth Instability in a Small Tokamak
9:30 AM–10:00 AM
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Abstract  
Author:
Joshua Breslau
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
The sawtooth instability [1] is the most fundamental dynamic of 
an inductive tokamak discharge such as will occur in ITER. 
Sawtooth behavior is complex and remains incompletely explained. 
While the instability is confined to the center of the plasma in 
low-pressure, low-current, large aspect ratio discharges, under 
certain conditions it can create magnetic islands at the outer 
resonant surfaces and may set off a sequence of events that 
leads to a major disruption. Under some circumstances the 
reconnection following the sawtooth is observed to be complete; 
in others, it is incomplete. As part of the CEMM SciDAC project, 
we have undertaken an ambitious campaign to model this periodic 
motion as accurately as possible using the most complete fluid-
like description of the plasma, the Extended MHD model. Both 
NIMROD and M3D have been applied to this problem, and we are 
also using it as a non-trivial test problem to compare these two
codes far into the nonlinear regime. Compared to the MHD model, 
Extended MHD predicts plasma rotation, faster reconnection, and 
reduced field line stochasticity in the crash aftermath. The 
multiple time scales associated with the reconnection layer and 
growth time make this an extremely challenging computational 
problem. A recent M3D simulation used over 500,000 elements for 
400,000 partially implicit time steps, and there still remain 
some resolution issues. However these calculations are providing 
insight into the nonlinear mechanisms of surface breakup and 
healing. We have been able to match many features of a small 
tokamak and can now project to the computational requirements 
for simulations of larger, hotter devices such as ITER. These 
simulations form the basis for studying more complex phenomena 
such as the effect on these modes of an energetic particle 
component, or of externally generated electromagnetic waves (RF).
[1] R.J. Hastie, Astrophys. Space Sci. {\bf 256} 177 (1997).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.DPP.GI2.1