Publication | Open Access
Growth and decay of runaway electrons above the critical electric field under quiescent conditions
70
Citations
50
References
2014
Year
EngineeringNuclear PhysicsLow Density OperationRe ExcitationPlasma SciencePlasma PhysicsQuiescent ConditionsElectron PhysicPlasma SimulationPlasma TheoryPlasma ConfinementRunaway ElectronsCritical Electric FieldElectrical EngineeringPhysicsApplied Plasma PhysicTime-dependent Dielectric BreakdownFundamental Plasma PhysicAtomic PhysicsPlasma InstabilityTokamak Re AvalanchesNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsCritical Phenomenon
Extremely low density operation free of error field penetration supports the excitation of trace-level quiescent runaway electron (RE) populations during the flat-top of DIII-D Ohmic discharges. Operation in the quiescent regime allows accurate measurement of all key parameters important to RE excitation, including the internal broadband magnetic fluctuation level. RE onset is characterized and found to be consistent with primary (Dreicer) generation rates. Impurity-free collisional suppression of the RE population is investigated by stepping the late-time main-ion density, until RE decay is observed. The transition from growth to decay is found to occur 3–5 times above the theoretical critical electric field for avalanche growth and is thus indicative of anomalous RE loss. This suggests that suppression of tokamak RE avalanches can be achieved at lower density than previously expected, though extrapolation requires predictive understanding of the RE loss mechanism and magnitude.
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