Velocity-space tomography of the fast-ion distribution function

POSTER

Abstract

Fast ions play an important role in heating the plasma in a magnetic confinement fusion device. Fast-ion D$_\alpha$(FIDA) spectroscopy diagnoses fast ions in small measurement volumes. Spectra measured by a FIDA diagnostic can be related to the 2D fast-ion velocity distribution function. A single FIDA view probes certain regions in velocity-space, determined by the geometry of the set-up. Exploiting this, the fast-ion distribution function can be inferred using a velocity-space tomography method. This poster contains a tomography calculated from measured spectra from three different FIDA views at ASDEX Upgrade. The quality of the tomography improves with the number of FIDA views simultaneously measuring the same volume. To investigate the potential benefits of including additional views (up to 18), tomographies are inferred from synthetic spectra calculated from a simulated distribution function. The number of experimentally available views can be increased by combining different types of diagnostics in a joint velocity-space tomography. Using this, up to 7 views are available at ASDEX Upgrade from 2014.

Authors

  • Asger Schou Jacobsen

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Mirko Salewski

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Benedikt Geiger

    • Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Plasmaphysik, Garching
  • Manuel Garc\'Ia-Mu\~noz

    • University of Seville
  • William Heidbrink

    • University of California-Irvine
  • S{\O}ren Bang Korsholm

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Frank Leipold

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Jens Madsen

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Poul Michelsen

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Dmitry Moseev

    • Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Plasmaphysik, Garching
  • Stefan Kragh Nielsen

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Jesper Rasmussen

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Morten Stejner

    • Technical University of Denmark
  • Giovanni Tardini

    • Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Plasmaphysik, Garching