Abstract

Destabilization of ion cyclotron waves—waves with frequencies close to ion cyclotron harmonics—in inhomogeneous plasmas with Maxwell velocity distribution is considered. A new mechanism of destabilization of these waves is found, whereas the known interaction between cyclotron waves and drift waves is shown to be hardly able to lead to instabilities in realistic tokamak plasmas. Our finding is that the resonance wave–particle interaction in the presence of temperature gradient can change the diamagnetic drift frequency in such a way that the destabilizing influence of the diamagnetic drift exceeds Landau damping. This occurs when the energy of resonance particles is sufficiently high, which is always the case due to the infinite tail of the Maxwell distribution. Particles with higher energies provide a larger ratio of drive to damping, but the number of resonance particles and, thus, instability growth rates are exponentially small when particle energy is very high. Therefore, only moderately suprathermal particles can lead to observable instabilities. A condition for instabilities driven by these particles is obtained. Destabilization of electrostatic cyclotron waves and ordinary cyclotron waves is studied.

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