49th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 52, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 12–16, 2007;
Orlando, Florida
Session NI2: MHD, Strongly Coupled and Low Temperature Plasmas
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Rosen Centre Hotel
Room: Salon 3/4
Chair: Phil Efthimion, PPPL, Princeton University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.DPP.NI2.1
Abstract: NI2.00001 : Ion Heating During Reconnection in the Madison Symmetric Torus
9:30 AM–10:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Darren Craig
(Wheaton College and the Center for Magnetic Self Organization in Laboratory and Astrophysical Plasmas)
New spatially and temporally resolved measurements of ion temperature in MST
provide new insight into the long observed ion heating associated with
reconnection, and strong constraints on possible theories for the heating.
Ion heating in MST is a strong effect, with a transient heating power of up
to 50 MW during large reconnection events, resulting in ion temperatures $>$
2 keV in high current plasmas. Recently, such ion heating has been used to
good effect: to produce high ion temperatures that are then sustained during
plasma periods with improved confinement. The heating power during a
reconnection event derives from a drop in global stored magnetic energy. Two
diagnostic neutral beams are used to make fast localized measurements of
impurity ions (via fast charge exchange recombination spectroscopy) and
majority ions (via Rutherford scattering). Spatial profiles of the heating
show a link between where reconnection occurs and where heating occurs.
During large reconnection events involving many coupled reconnection sites,
a broadly distributed heating profile is observed. Conversely, heating is
localized to the edge in smaller reconnection events involving only edge
resonant modes. Impurities are heated more strongly than bulk deuterium ions
in deuterium plasmas (by about a factor of 2). This suggests a dependence on
mass or charge. Many potential ion heating theories have been advanced but
all fail to capture all of the observed features. Recent calculations
evaluate viscous and cyclotron damping. Viscous damping of tearing mode
flows could be important if strong, localized flow gradients are present,
encouraging a search for such flows. A cascade of fluctuation power to ion
gyroradius scales appears too weak for direct bulk heating, but could be
important for impurity heating. Magnetic pumping can be important during
plasma startup but should be less so during the discharge flattop where
strong heating is still observed.
Work supported by U.S.D.O.E. and N.S.F.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.DPP.NI2.1