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Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 195002 (2009) [4 pages]

Role of Plasma Elongation on Turbulent Transport in Magnetically Confined Plasmas

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P. Angelino1, X. Garbet1, L. Villard2, A. Bottino3, S. Jolliet2, Ph. Ghendrih1, V. Grandgirard1, B. F. McMillan2, Y. Sarazin1, G. Dif-Pradalier1, and T. M. Tran2
1Association Euratom-CEA, CEA/DSM/IRFM, Cadarache, France
2CRPP Lausanne, Association Euratom-Confédération Suisse, Lausanne, Switzerland
3Max Plank Institut für Plasmaphysik, IPP-EURATOM Association, Garching, Germany

Received 26 September 2008; published 12 May 2009

The theoretical study of plasma turbulence is of central importance to fusion research. Experimental evidence indicates that the confinement time results mainly from the turbulent transport of energy, the magnitude of which depends on the turbulent state resulting from nonlinear saturation mechanisms, in particular, the self-generation of coherent macroscopic structures and large scale flows. Plasma geometry has a strong impact on the structure and magnitude of these flows and also modifies the mode linear growth rates. Nonlinear global gyrokinetic simulations in realistic tokamak magnetohydrodynamic equilibria show how plasma shape can control the turbulent transport. Results are best described in terms of an effective temperature gradient. With increasing plasma elongation, the nonlinear critical effective gradient is not modified while the stiffness of transport is decreasing.

© 2009 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.195002
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.195002
PACS:
52.55.Fa, 52.30.−q, 52.35.Ra, 52.65.−y