Tokamak Plasma High Field Side Response to an n = 3
Magnetic
Perturbation: A Comparison of 3D Equilibrium
Solutions from
Seven Different Codes
Authors: A. Reiman, N.M. Ferraro, A. Turnbull,
J.K. Park, A. Cerfon,
T.E. Evans, M.J. Lanctot, E.A. Lazarus, Y.
Liu, G. McFadden,
D. Monticello, Y. Suzuki
Abstract: In comparing equilibrium solutions for a
DIII-D shot that is amenable to analysis by both stellarator and
tokamak 3D equilibrium codes, a significant disagreement has been
seen between solutions of the VMEC stellarator equilibrium code
and solutions of tokamak perturbative 3D equilibrium codes. The
source of that disagreement has been investigated, and that
investigation has led to new insights into the domain of validity
of the different equilibrium calculations, and to a finding that
the manner in which localized screening currents at low order
rational surfaces are handled can affect global properties of the
equilibrium solution. The perturbative treatment has been found to
break down at surprisingly small perturbation amplitudes due to
overlap of the calculated perturbed flux surfaces, and that
treatment is not valid in the pedestal region of the DIII-D shot
studied. The perturbative treatment is valid, however, further
into the interior of the plasma, and flux surface overlap does not
account for the disagreement investigated here. Calculated
equilibrium solutions for simple model cases and comparison of the
3D equilibrium solutions with those of other codes indicate that
the disagreement arises from a difference in handling of localized
currents at low order rational surfaces, with such currents being
absent in VMEC and present in the perturbative codes. The
significant differences in the global equilibrium solutions
associated with the presence or absence of very localized
screening currents at rational surfaces suggests that it may be
possible to extract information about localized currents from
appropriate measurements of global equilibrium plasma properties.
That would require improved diagnostic capability on the high
field side of the tokamak plasma, a region difficult to access
with diagnostics.
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Submitted to: Nuclear Fusion
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Download PPPL-5133 (pdf 3.6 MB 27 pp)
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