학술논문

Advanced fusion diagnostics. Final technical report, July 15, 1991--July 14, 1993
Document Type
Technical Report
Author
Source
Other Information: PBD: 14 Jul 1993
Subject
70 PLASMA PHYSICS AND FUSION TECHNOLOGY TOKAMAK DEVICES
PLASMA DIAGNOSTICS
ION CYCLOTRON-RESONANCE
PROGRESS REPORT
RF SYSTEMS
PLASMA HEATING
DISTRIBUTION FUNCTIONS
ENERGY TRANSFER
ION-ION COLLISIONS 700320
PLASMA DIAGNOSTIC TECHNIQUES AND INSTRUMENTATION
ELEMENTARY AND CLASSICAL PROCESSES IN PLASMAS
Language
English
Abstract
Key among various issues of ignited plasmas is understanding the physics of energy transfer between thermal plasma particles and magnetically confined, highly energetic charged ions in a tokamak device. The superthermal particles are products of fusion reactions. The efficiency of energy transfer by collisions, from charged fusion products (e.g., {alpha}-particles) to plasma ions, grossly determines whether or not plasma conditions are self-sustaining without recourse to auxiliary heating. Furthermore, should energy transfer (efficiency be poor, and substantial auxiliary heating power is required to maintain reacting conditions within the plasma, economics may preclude commercial viability of fusion reactors. The required charged fusion product information is contained in the energy distribution function of these particles. Knowledge of temporal variations of the superthermal particle energy distribution function could be used by a fusion reactor control system to balance plasma conditions between thermal runaway and a modicum of fusion product energy transfer. Therefore, diagnostics providing data on the dynamical transfer of alpha-particle and other charged fusion product energy to the plasma ions are essential elements for a fusion reactor control system to insure that proper plasma conditions are maintained. The objective of this work is to assess if spectral analysis of rf radiation emitted by charged fusion products confined in a magnetized plasma, called ion cyclotron emission (ICE), can reveal the vital data of the distribution function of the superthermal particles.