Abstract

Magnetic reconnection occurred during merging-compression plasma start-up in the Mega Amp Spherical Tokamak (MAST), resulting in the prompt acceleration of substantial numbers of ions and electrons to highly suprathermal energies. Accelerated field-aligned ions (deuterons and protons) were detected using a neutral particle analyser at energies up to about 20 keV during merging in early MAST pulses, while nonthermal electrons have been detected indirectly in more recent pulses through microwave bursts. However no increase in soft x-ray emission was observed until later in the merging phase, by which time strong electron heating had been detected through Thomson scattering measurements. A test-particle code CUEBIT is used to model ion acceleration in the presence of an inductive toroidal electric field with a prescribed spatial profile and temporal evolution based on Hall-MHD simulations of the merging process. The simulations yield particle distributions with properties similar to those observed experimentally, including strong field alignment of the fast ions and the acceleration of protons to higher energies than deuterons. Particle-in-cell modelling of a plasma containing a dilute field-aligned suprathermal electron component suggests that at least some of the microwave bursts can be attributed to the anomalous Doppler instability driven by anisotropic fast electrons, which do not produce measurable enhancements in soft x-ray emission either because they are insufficiently energetic or because the nonthermal bremsstrahlung emissivity during this phase of the pulse is below the detection threshold. There is no evidence of runaway electron acceleration during merging, possibly due to the presence of three-dimensional field perturbations.

Highlights

  • Toroidal plasmas in the Mega Amp Spherical Tokamak (MAST) were routinely started by forcing two separate plasma tori to merge in the vessel midplane, causing magnetic reconnection to occur [1]

  • We have demonstrated that MAST neutral particle analyser (NPA) and microwave data provide strong evidence of, respectively, ion and electron acceleration due to magnetic reconnection associated with merging plasma start-up

  • Ion energy spectra from pulses with different Neutral particle analyser (NPA) lines-of-sight suggest that the fast ions are strongly aligned with the magnetic field

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Summary

Introduction

Toroidal plasmas in the Mega Amp Spherical Tokamak (MAST) were routinely started by forcing two separate plasma tori to merge in the vessel midplane, causing magnetic reconnection to occur [1]. Modelling of ion acceleration, based on an analytically-prescribed time-varying magnetic flux, is presented, while results from a particle-in-cell simulation of a plasma containing anisotropic fast electrons are used in section 4 to interpret the microwave burst measurements.

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