Design and Testing of Electron Bernstein Wave Emission Radiometers for the National Spherical Torus Experiment and the TJ-II Stellerator
POSTER
Abstract
Efficient Electron Bernstein wave (EBW) mode conversion is important for viable electron heating of high $\beta $ plasmas, such as those on NSTX and TJ-II. Measurement of the thermal EBW emission from the plasma allows the EBW mode conversion efficiency to be determined, and also has the potential to offer a diagnostic for measuring electron temperature profile evolution. For NSTX, a dual-polarized quad-ridged broadband horn with a focusing lens is being used to measure the EBW emission at 20-40 GHz. A focused beam is needed to achieve efficient coupling at the mode conversion layer. The horn is mounted on a spherical base that can be moved up to 10 degrees in any direction. Emission from the plasma propagates through a glass lens and is focused on the horn. For TJ-II, a design using a corrugated horn configuration is being considered. For both systems, the field pattern from the horn or horn-lens combination has been measured with a 3-D scanning system in an effort to minimize the beam waist at the plasma edge. Details of the experimental results and future plans will be presented.
*Oak Ridge National Laboratory is managed by UT-Battelle, LLC, for the U.S. Dept. of Energy under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725