Experimental and theoretical developments in the Mochi project

POSTER

Abstract

The Mochi project investigates the interaction between magnetic fields and plasma flows in cylindrical and toroidal geometries. The configuration is designed to tailor the radial electric field profile with three annular electrodes and allow for shear helical flows in magnetized plasma jets or merging spheromaks. First plasma has been achieved and characterization is in progress with images, magnetic probes, an energy analyzer, an interferometer, a fast ion gauge, and optical and RF spectroscopy. Vector tomography of ion Doppler spectroscopy is progressing with the design of the custom fiber bundle and implementation of the numerical code. The first experiments are investigating the coupling of sausage and kink instabilities, comparing measurements to a new stability criterion and a numerical stability code. A new canonical field theory has been developed to help interpret the dynamics of plasma self-organization. The theory augments the Lagrangian of general dynamical systems to rigourously demonstrate that canonical helicity transport is valid across single particle, kinetic and fluid regimes, that dynamical equations can be re-formulated as a form of Maxwell's equations, and that helicity is conserved only when density gradients are shallow.

*This work is supported by US DOE Grant DE-SC0010340

Authors

  • Setthivoine You

    • University of Washington
  • Jens von der Linden

    • University of Washington
  • Keon Vereen

    • University of Washington
  • Eric Sander Lavine

    • University of Washington
  • Evan Carroll

    • University of Washington
  • Alexander Card

    • University of Washington
  • Manuel Azuara-Rosales

    • University of Washington
  • Morgan Quinley

    • University of Washington
  • Gunsu Yun

    • Pohang Institute of Technology, Korea