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 TP12: Poster Session VII:
Turbulence and transport in fusion plasmas
ITER
MFE Heating and Energetic Particles
Self-organized configuration FRC, RFP, Spheromak
9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
Thursday, October 10, 2024
Hyatt Regency
Room: Grand Hall West
Abstract: TP12.00026 : Dimits transition in electromagnetic ITG turbulence
Presenter:
Yujia Zhang
Authors:
Yujia Zhang
Michael Barnes
(Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford, OX1 3NP, UK)
Alexander A Schekochihin
(University of Oxford)
Plamen G Ivanov
(University of Oxford)
Toby Adkins
(University of Otago)
(ITG) turbulence in a Z-pinch magnetic geometry has been derived from gyrokinetics. First,
we carry out a mass ratio expansion ( me /mi ≪ 1) similar to the procedure introduced in
(Schekochihin et al., 2009). It is then followed by a subsidiary expansion in small k⊥ ρi , where
k⊥ is the typical wavenumber perpendicular to the mean field line and ρi is the ion gyroradius.
Since we study ITG in the long-wavelength limit k⊥ ρi ≪ 1, it requires shifting the driving scale
of ITG also to long wavelength, leading to the cold-ion assumption, which is used in electro-
static ITG fluid models studied previously (Ivanov et al., 2020, 2022). The novelty of the model
presented here is that it retains electromagnetic (EM) effects and aims to provide a physical
mechanism by which the ITG turbulence transitions from a low-transport, zonally dominated
state to a high-transport state with weak zonal flows. It is found that Maxwell stress tends to
shift the Dimits transition to lower temperature gradients. Generally as β is increased, where
β is the ratio between plasma pressure and magnetic pressure, Maxwell stress starts to erode
the zonal flow, setting a threshold β above which the turbulence can no longer support a strong
zonal flow and hence produces relatively large transport. Studying this model is an attempt to
understand why many local gyrokinetic simulations of ITG turbulence lead to divergent heat
fluxes at finite β(Pueschel et al., 2013b).
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