Abstract

Internally consistent characterization of the properties of the fast-ion distribution from multiple diagnostics is a prerequisite for obtaining a full understanding of fast-ion behavior in tokamak plasmas. Here we benchmark several absolutely-calibrated core fast-ion diagnostics at ASDEX Upgrade by comparing fast-ion measurements from collective Thomson scattering, fast-ion spectroscopy, and neutron rate detectors with numerical predictions from the TRANSP/NUBEAM transport code. We also study the sensitivity of the theoretical predictions to uncertainties in the plasma kinetic profiles. We find that theory and measurements generally agree within these uncertainties for all three diagnostics during heating phases with either one or two neutral beam injection sources. This suggests that the measurements can be described by the same model assuming classical slowing down of fast ions. Since the three diagnostics in the adopted configurations probe partially overlapping regions in fast-ion velocity space, this is also consistent with good internal agreement among the measurements themselves. Hence, our results support the feasibility of combining multiple diagnostics at ASDEX Upgrade to reconstruct the fast-ion distribution function in 2D velocity space.

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