Abstract

The observed bifurcations of the low frequency (<50 kHz) and low toroidal periodicity (n < 5) magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) activity often present in the initial part of the National Spherical Tokamak Experiment (NSTX) discharges can be explained by the evolution of the radial profile of the safety factor (q=rBϕ/RBθ) crossing multiple rational surfaces in the core. Important performance limiting instability mechanisms in the NSTX spherical tokamak are often linked to low frequency and low-n MHD activity. They are quite common in long-pulse NSTX plasmas. They can be present at the beginning of the plasma current flat-top, at the end of the discharge or during the whole duration, and they have been observed to deleteriously impact performance over a wide range of q95. An interesting feature observed in some NSTX discharges is the presence of a bifurcation in the frequency of the low n modes, as low as n = 1, that have frequencies comparable to the plasma core rotation divided by n. Equilibrium reconstructions constrained by magnetic diagnostics data and motional stark effect pitch angle radial profiles suggest that the observed bifurcations are linked to a fast evolving minimum value of q. 3D non-linear resistive MHD simulations show that these modes are ideal and exist as non-resonant before the correspondent rational surface enters the plasma.

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