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 UP12: Poster Session VIII:
Particle acceleration, beams and relativistic plasmas: Laser-driven sources, Relativistic interactions and Diagnostics and Measurement Techniques
MFE Disruptions Avoidance and Divertor Physics
ICF2: Advanced diagnostics and measurement innovation; Laser-plasma instabilities; Hohlraum and x-ray cavity physics; Hydrodynamic instability; ICF concepts and drivers; Ignition physics
High Energy Density Diagnostics
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Thursday, October 10, 2024
Hyatt Regency
Room: Grand Hall West
Abstract: UP12.00024 : Advanced Reconstruction of Plasma and Vessel Current Distributions During Disruptions*
Presenter:
Jamie Laveeda Xia
(Columbia University)
Authors:
Jamie Laveeda Xia
(Columbia University)
Anson E Braun
(Columbia University)
Christopher J Hansen
(Columbia University)
Ian G Stewart
(Columbia University)
Carlos Alberto Paz-Soldan
(Columbia University)
Andrey Lvovskiy
(General Atomics)
Capturing the evolution of the plasma during and after disruptions is important for understanding post-disruption plasma stability, heat load evolution, and improving disruption mitigation strategies. Conventional equilibrium tools such as EFIT are limited in their ability to capture the plasma state during highly transient phases, such as disruptions. Filament analysis tools provide a promising alternative for equilibrium modeling in these scenarios. In this work we explore the extension of such models to capture non-axisymmetric eddy currents using the 3D thin-wall E-M code ThinCurr [1] . By including a more complete wall model, eigenmodes or other physically-informed structures, it reduces the number of free parameters and increases the number of constraints by incorporating such 3D sensor information. Of particular interest is whether including a 3D wall model enables improved assessment of 3D structures within the post-disruption plasma from toroidally-distributed magnetic measurements. We will present progress and plans on a comparative analysis between the Thincurr-based approach and JFIT to reconstruct plasma position, shape, and current distributions, including application to disruptive shots in DIII-D, LTX, and SPARC.
[1] A. Battey et al., Nucl. Fusion 64 016010 (2024)
*Work supported by US DOE under awards DE-SC0022270, DE-SC0024898, and Commonwealth Fusion Systems
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