Abstract

Statistical properties of the scrape-off layer plasma fluctuations are studied in ohmically heated plasmas in the Alcator C-Mod tokamak. For the first time, plasma fluctuations as well as parameters that describe the fluctuations are compared across measurements from a mirror Langmuir probe (MLP) and from gas-puff imaging (GPI) that sample the same plasma discharge. This comparison is complemented by an analysis of line emission time-series data, synthesized from the MLP electron density and temperature measurements. The fluctuations observed by the MLP and GPI typically display relative fluctuation amplitudes of order unity together with positively skewed and flattened probability density functions. Such data time series are well described by an established stochastic framework that models the data as a superposition of uncorrelated, two-sided exponential pulses. The most important parameter of the process is the intermittency parameter, $\gamma = {\tau _{d}} / {\tau _{w}}$ , where ${\tau _{d}}$ denotes the duration time of a single pulse and ${\tau _{w}}$ gives the average waiting time between consecutive pulses. Here we show, using a new deconvolution method, that these parameters can be consistently estimated from different statistics of the data. We also show that the statistical properties of the data sampled by the MLP and GPI diagnostic are very similar. Finally, a synthetic GPI signal using only plasma parameters sampled by the MLP shows qualitatively different fluctuation statistics from the measured GPI signal.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe scrape-off layer (SOL) region of magnetically confined plasmas, as used in experiments on fusion energy, is the interface between the hot fusion plasma and material

  • The scrape-off layer (SOL) region of magnetically confined plasmas, as used in experiments on fusion energy, is the interface between the hot fusion plasma and materialDownloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core

  • We show that the statistical properties of the data sampled by the mirror Langmuir probe (MLP) and gas-puff imaging (GPI) diagnostic are very similar

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Summary

Introduction

The scrape-off layer (SOL) region of magnetically confined plasmas, as used in experiments on fusion energy, is the interface between the hot fusion plasma and material. In the outboard SOL, blob-like plasma filaments transport plasma and heat from the confined plasma column radially outward toward the main chamber wall. These filaments are elongated along the magnetic field lines and are spatially localized in the radial–poloidal plane. They typically present order-unity relative fluctuations in the plasma pressure. As they constitute the dominant mode of cross-field transport in the SOL, one needs to understand their collective effect on the time-averaged plasma profiles and on the fluctuation statistics of the SOL plasma in order to develop predictive modelling capabilities for the particle and heat fluxes impinging on the plasma-facing components

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