Abstract

We use the 3D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) code M3D-C1 [Jardin et al., Comput. Sci. Discovery 5, 014002 (2012)] to examine the MHD stability and subsequent evolution of NSTX shot 129169. This discharge had a period with a non-monotonic safety factor profile, q (reversed shear), which was terminated by a MHD event that abruptly lowered the central safety factor, q0, and greatly reduced the peakedness of the pressure profile. We show that the equilibrium just before the MHD event occurred was linearly unstable to many pressure-driven infernal modes. Modes with toroidal mode number n≥3 all had rational surfaces very close to the minimum value of q. However, a non-resonant pressure-driven (1, 1) mode was also present, and this dominated the nonlinear evolution. The final state in the simulation, after the MHD activity subsided, had a reduced and flattened pressure profile and a nearly monotonic q-profile, in qualitative agreement with experimental results. The initial state was also unstable to the resistive interchange criteria in the reversed-shear region, but the final state was stable everywhere. The “double tearing mode” (DTM) does not appear to play a role in the MHD activity of this discharge. In Appendix A, we show that in a torus, the DTM is strongly stabilized by pressure, but it is destabilized in cylindrical geometry (which has been the most extensively analyzed in the literature).

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