The ECE radiation signature of runaway electrons in optically thick and thin plasmas
POSTER
Abstract
Dedicated forward modeling is applied to interpret Electron Cyclotron Emission (ECE) radiation from runaway electrons (>500 keV) on the DIII-D tokamak. ECE measures the radiation temperature profile Te,rad (R) using the 2nd harmonic cold resonance in a tokamak. It is found the runaway’s effect on depends heavily on the plasma optical depth. For Te,rad (R) near the plasma axis where ECE is optically thick, only the runaways at the outboard side of the cold resonance contribute to the radiation. In this case, the increased Te,rad (R) by runaway is made through emission from the relativistic downshift of the 3rd or 4th harmonic ECE resonance, and a large pitch angle is needed for runaways to make noticeable change on Te,rad (R). For Te,rad (R) near the plasma edge where the ECE is optically thin, the downshifted 2nd harmonic radiation from runaways at the inboard side play the dominant role increasing the radiation. In this case, a large pitch angle is not required for runaways to make a noticeable change on Te,rad (R) . The knowledge from the modeling successfully explains Te,rad (R) in a DIII-D runaway discharge, where Te,rad (R) close to the axis is unsymmetrical between the low and high field side, and the edge Te,rad (R) is significantly higher than the thermal value. Future application will involve interpreting Te,rad (R) when whistler waves scatter the runaways.
*Work supported by DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-FG02-99ER54531, DE-AC02-09CH11466, DE-SC0023500, DE-SC0023378, DE-FG02-97ER54415, and DE-SC0019003.
Presenters
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Guanying Yu
- University of California, Davis