Bulletin of the American Physical Society
65th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2023; Denver, Colorado
Session NP11: Poster Session V:
MFE:DIII-D and conventional tokamaks I;Heating and energetic particles;ITER, HBT-EP, and tokamak control
HED: Measurements and analysis in HED plasmas
Fundamental: Fundamental processes in plasmas
Mini Conference:Experiments in Lab and Space
MFE: Measurement and diagnostics techniques
9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
Wednesday, November 1, 2023
Room: Plaza ABC
Abstract: NP11.00149 : Optimization of a Diagnostic Suite for Magnetized Target Fusion Experiments
Presenter:
Filiberto G Braglia
(General Fusion Inc)
Authors:
Filiberto G Braglia
(General Fusion Inc)
Akbar Rohollahi
(General Fusion Inc)
Patrick Carle
(General Fusion)
Stephen J Howard
(General Fusion)
Matt Herunter
(General Fusion Inc)
Calum MacDonald
(General Fusion Inc)
Andrea Tancetti
(General Fusion Inc)
Curtis Gutjahr
(General Fusion)
Simon Coop
(General Fusion Inc)
Xiande Feng
(General Fusion Inc)
Henry Gould
(General Fusion Inc)
Reid Tingley
(General Fusion Inc)
Ryan Zindler
(General Fusion Inc)
Aaron Froese
(General Fusion)
Machine learning algorithms are applied to libraries of Grad-Shafranov (GS) equilibria calculated with GF's custom solver, and to scaling laws from simulated compression cases. The data are processed by a dimensionality reduction algorithm paired with a clustering algorithm, which identifies key sensor positions. The expected error on each parameter is back-calculated with a reconstruction algorithm. A Monte Carlo error propagation algorithm is finally applied to each case, in order to estimate the impact of measurement accuracy on the reconstructed values. Preliminary results show that reliable measurements of magnetic parameters can be achieved with 10 surface probes, with errors on magnetic energy as low as 10%. The same analysis will be expanded to include more diagnostics, and to several stages of compression.
A custom Monte Carlo algorithm paired with physics-based constraints will predict the expected error on the triple product, quantify the accuracy required on each diagnostic system, and provide a reliable confirmation of the main scientific milestones.
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