Bulletin of the American Physical Society
63rd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 66, Number 13
Monday–Friday, November 8–12, 2021; Pittsburgh, PA
Session TP11: Poster Session VII:
Fundamental Plasma Physics - Waves, Instabilities, and Shocks; Turbulence and Transport Phenomena; Single-Component Plasmas
MFE- High Field & Long Pulse Tokamaks: Pinch, Mirrors, Spheromak, and Other Magnetic Relaxation
9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2021
Room: Hall A
Abstract: TP11.00105 : Design and synthetic diagnostic of a multi-energy hard x-ray camera for profile measurements at WEST tokamak*
Presenter:
Tullio Barbui
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Authors:
Tullio Barbui
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Luis F Delgado-Aparicio
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Yves Peysson
(IRFM - CEA Cadarache)
Brentley C Stratton
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Gregory M Wallace
(MIT PSFC)
Oulfa Chellai
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Kenneth W Hill
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Novimir A Pablant
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
This contribution presents the design of the diagnostic, which is based on a novel 2D pixel array x-ray detector with adjustable threshold energy at pixel level. This innovation provides a great flexibility in the energy configuration allowing simultaneous time, space and energy resolved x-ray measurements. The detector has been calibrated in the range 10-100 keV.
A synthetic diagnostic has been developed by incorporating the geometry of the ME-HXR into two different suites of codes for the simulation of LH wave absorption and fast electron Bremsstrahlung production: C3PO/LUKE/R5-X2 and GENRAY/CQL3D. This contribution presents the outcomes of the two codes highlighting their differences.
*This work is supported by the U.S. DOE-OFES under Contract No. DE-AC02-09CH11466.
Follow Us |
Engage
Become an APS Member |
My APS
Renew Membership |
Information for |
About APSThe American Physical Society (APS) is a non-profit membership organization working to advance the knowledge of physics. |
© 2024 American Physical Society
| All rights reserved | Terms of Use
| Contact Us
Headquarters
1 Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740-3844
(301) 209-3200
Editorial Office
100 Motor Pkwy, Suite 110, Hauppauge, NY 11788
(631) 591-4000
Office of Public Affairs
529 14th St NW, Suite 1050, Washington, D.C. 20045-2001
(202) 662-8700