Publication | Open Access
Turbulence imaging and applications using beam emission spectroscopy on DIII-D (invited)
82
Citations
21
References
2003
Year
EngineeringPlasma SciencePlasma PhysicsSpace Plasma PhysicTurbulence ImagingBeam OpticOptical DiagnosticsOptical PropertiesPlasma SimulationPlasma TheoryPlasma ConfinementInstrumentationOptical SpectroscopyPlasma DiagnosticsPlasma TurbulencePoloidal PlanePhysicsImaging SpectroscopyFundamental Plasma PhysicBeam Emission SpectroscopyAerospace EngineeringNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsTurbulence ModelingDensity Fluctuations
Two-dimensional measurements of density fluctuations are obtained in the radial and poloidal plane of the DIII-D tokamak with the Beam Emission Spectroscopy (BES) diagnostic system. The goals are to visualize the spatial structure and time evolution of turbulent eddies, as well as to obtain the 2D statistical properties of turbulence. The measurements are obtained with an array of localized BES spatial channels configured to image a midplane region of the plasma. 32 channels have been deployed, each with a spatial resolution of about 1 cm in the radial and poloidal directions, thus providing measurements of turbulence in the wave number range 0<k⊥⩽3 cm−1. A 5 (radial)×6 (poloidal) channel grid provides time-resolved images near the outer midplane at the sampling frequency of 1 MHz, thus providing a modest spatial resolution, high throughput, high time resolution turbulence imaging system. The images and resulting movies have broad application to a wide variety of fundamental turbulence studies: imaging of the highly complex, nonlinear turbulent eddy interactions, measurement of the 2D correlation function, and S(kr,kθ) wave number spectra, and direct measurement of the equilibrium and time-dependent turbulence flow field. The time-dependent, two-dimensional turbulence velocity flow-field is obtained with time-delay-estimation techniques.
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