Abstract

A phenomenon is analyzed, which is observed at some laboratory-scale tokamaks and seems to be unexplained: a strong drop in the soft x-ray radiation (SXR) after it passed through the ‘thick’ Be foils (the pit in the SXR spectrum). This phenomenon becomes more pronounced as the foil thickness increases and the plasma electron density decreases. The explanation for this phenomenon is proposed, which involves the assumption that the Maxwellian electron velocity distribution becomes ‘depleted’ in the range of velocities that are 3–5 times higher than the thermal one. The anomalous electron heat transport along the weakly perturbed toroidal magnetic field of the tokamak (the ‘magnetic flutter’ model) seems to be the most probable reason for this depletion. Thus, the ‘SXR—Pit’ can be a new tool for studying the physical nature of the anomalous electron transport in tokamaks.

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