Bulletin of the American Physical Society
66th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 7–11, 2024; Atlanta, Georgia
Session NP12: Poster Session V:
Fundamental Plasma Physics III: waves, self-organization
Fundamental Plasma Physics IV: turbulence, reconnection, non-neutral/antimatter
High Field Tokamaks
Mirrors
9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
Hyatt Regency
Room: Grand Hall West
Abstract: NP12.00086 : A Comprehensive Gyrokinetic Framework for Energetic Particles
Presenter:
Ian G Abel
(University of Maryland College Park)
Authors:
Ian G Abel
(University of Maryland College Park)
George J Wilkie
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Alexander A Schekochihin
(University of Oxford)
interest as the community designs scenarios for current and future Fusion Pilot Plant designs. These effects range
from the interaction of energetic particles with existing turbulence improving confinement [A. Di Siena et al 2023
Nucl. Fusion 63 036003] to extensive integrated work modelling energetic-particle-driven instabilities. Gyrokinetic
codes are routinely used for these studies so the time is ripe to confirm the underlying theoretical basis for using these
tools.
In this work the multiscale gyrokinetic framework of [Abel et. al. Rep. Prog. Phys. 2013] is extended to include
a collisionless species, whose collisions occur on the transport timescale. This extension allows for non-Maxwellian
distribution functions, such as those produced by neutral beam and radio-frequency heating in current fusion devices
or alpha particles in future burning plasmas. In performing this extension, we provide the theoretical basis in which
the numerical studies of [Wilkie et. al. Phys Plasmas 2016 & Plasma Phys. and Control. Fus. 2017] were grounded.
The issue of parallel flows of these collisionless species is also discussed, and gives rise to a self-consistent inclusion
of current drive within the multiscale framework. We also examine the fully-general system in the limit where
the transport of collisionless particles is subdominant. This leads to a formalism including a tail distribution that
thermalizes before undergoing turbulent transport.
We demonstrate the utility of this framework by placing several well-known aspects of energetic particle physics
within it. These examples include passive transport of energetic particles by microturbulence, stabilisation of ITG by
energetic particles, and the effects of energetic particles on the magnetic equilibrium.
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