PPPL-3586 is available in pdf or postscript formats.

NSTX Diagnostics for Fusion Plasma Science Studies

Authors: R. Kaita, D. Johnson, L. Roquemore, M. Bitter, F. Levinton, F. Paoletti, D. Stutman, and the NSTX Team

Date of PPPL Report: July 2001

Published in: IEEE Transactions in Plasma Science 30 No. 1 (February 2002) 219-226; presented at the 13th International Pulsed Power Conference and the 28th IEEE International Conference on Plasma Science, Las Vegas, Nevada, June 18-22, 2001.

This paper will discuss how plasma science issues are addressed by the diagnostics for the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX), the newest large-scale machine in the magnetic confinement fusion (MCF) program. The development of new schemes for plasma confinement involves the interplay of experimental results and theoretical interpretations. A fundamental requirement, for example, is a determination of the equilibria for these configurations. For MCF, this is well established in the solutions of the Grad-Shafranov equation. While it is simple to state its basis in the balance between the kinetic and magnetic pressures, what they are as functions of space and time are often not easy to obtain. Quantities like the plasma pressure and current density are not directly measurable. They are derived from data that are themselves complex products of more basic parameters. The same difficulties apply to the understanding of plasma instabilities. Not only are the needs for spatial and temporal resolution more stringent, but the wave parameters which characterize the instabilities are difficult to resolve. We will show how solutions to the problems of diagnostic design on NSTX, and the physics insight the data analysis provides, benefits both NSTX and the broader scientific community.