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Dive into the research topics where M. A. Makowski is active.

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Featured researches published by M. A. Makowski.


Nuclear Fusion | 2013

Scaling of the tokamak near the scrape-off layer H-mode power width and implications for ITER

T. Eich; A.W. Leonard; R.A. Pitts; W. Fundamenski; R.J. Goldston; T.K. Gray; A. Herrmann; A. Kirk; A. Kallenbach; O. Kardaun; A.S. Kukushkin; B. LaBombard; R. Maingi; M. A. Makowski; A. Scarabosio; B. Sieglin; J. Terry; A. Thornton; Jet-Efda Contributors

A multi-machine database for the H-mode scrape-off layer power fall-off length, λq in JET, DIII-D, ASDEX Upgrade, C-Mod, NSTX and MAST has been assembled under the auspices of the International Tokamak Physics Activity. Regression inside the database finds that the most important scaling parameter is the poloidal magnetic field (or equivalently the plasma current), with λq decreasing linearly with increasing Bpol. For the conventional aspect ratio tokamaks, the regression finds , yielding λq,ITER 1 mm for the baseline inductive H-mode burning plasma scenario at Ip = 15 MA. The experimental divertor target heat flux profile data, from which λq is derived, also yield a divertor power spreading factor (S) which, together with λq, allows an integral power decay length on the target to be estimated. There are no differences in the λq scaling obtained from all-metal or carbon dominated machines and the inclusion of spherical tokamaks has no significant influence on the regression parameters. Comparison of the measured λq with the values expected from a recently published heuristic drift based model shows satisfactory agreement for all tokamaks.


Physics of Plasmas | 2001

Active feedback stabilization of the resistive wall mode on the DIII-D device

M. Okabayashi; J. Bialek; M.S. Chance; M. S. Chu; E. D. Fredrickson; A. M. Garofalo; M. Gryaznevich; Ron Hatcher; T. H. Jensen; L. C. Johnson; R.J. La Haye; E. A. Lazarus; M. A. Makowski; J. Manickam; G.A. Navratil; J. T. Scoville; E. J. Strait; A.D. Turnbull; M.L. Walker; Diii-D Team

A proof of principle magnetic feedback stabilization experiment has been carried out to suppress the resistive wall mode (RWM), a branch of the ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) kink mode under the influence of a stabilizing resistive wall, on the DIII-D tokamak device [Plasma Phys. and Contr. Fusion Research (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1986), p. 159]. The RWM was successfully suppressed and the high beta duration above the no wall limit was extended to more than 50 times the resistive wall flux diffusion time. It was observed that the mode structure was well preserved during the time of the feedback application. Several lumped parameter formulations were used to study the feedback process. The observed feedback characteristics are in good qualitative agreement with the analysis. These results provide encouragement to future efforts towards optimizing the RWM feedback methodology in parallel to what has been successfully developed for the n = 0 vertical positional control. Newly developed MHD codes have been extremely useful in guiding the experiments and in providing possible paths for the next step.


Physics of Plasmas | 2004

Resistive wall mode stabilization with internal feedback coils in DIII-D

E. J. Strait; J. Bialek; I.N. Bogatu; M.S. Chance; M. S. Chu; Dana Harold Edgell; A. M. Garofalo; G.L. Jackson; R. J. Jayakumar; T. H. Jensen; O. Katsuro-Hopkins; J.S. Kim; R.J. La Haye; L. L. Lao; M. A. Makowski; G.A. Navratil; M. Okabayashi; H. Reimerdes; J. T. Scoville; Alan D. Turnbull; Diii-D Team

A set of twelve coils for stability control has recently been installed inside the DIII-D [J. L. Luxon, Nucl. Fusion 42, 614 (2002)] vacuum vessel, offering faster time response and a wider range of applied mode spectra than the previous external coils. Stabilization of the n=1 ideal kink mode is crucial to many high beta, steady-state tokamak scenarios. A resistive wall converts the kink to a slowly growing resistive wall mode (RWM). With feedback-controlled error field correction, rotational stabilization of the RWM has been sustained for more than 2.5 s. Using the internal coils, the required correction field is smaller than with the external coils, consistent with a better match to the mode spectrum of the error field. Initial experiments in direct feedback control have stabilized the RWMs at higher beta and lower rotation than could be achieved by the external coils in similar plasmas, in qualitative agreement with numerical modeling. The new coils have also allowed wall stabilization in plasmas with...


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Analysis of a multi-machine database on divertor heat fluxesa)

M. A. Makowski; D. Elder; T.K. Gray; B. LaBombard; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; R. Maingi; T.H. Osborne; P.C. Stangeby; J. L. Terry; J.G. Watkins

A coordinated effort to measure divertor heat flux characteristics in fully attached, similarly shaped H-mode plasmas on C-Mod, DIII-D, and NSTX was carried out in 2010 in order to construct a predictive scaling relation applicable to next step devices including ITER, FNSF, and DEMO. Few published scaling laws are available and those that have been published were obtained under widely varying conditions and divertor geometries, leading to conflicting predictions for this critically important quantity. This study was designed to overcome these deficiencies. Analysis of the combined data set reveals that the primary dependence of the parallel heat flux width is robustly inverse with Ip, which all three tokamaks independently demonstrate. An improved Thomson scattering system on DIII-D has yielded very accurate scrape off layer (SOL) profile measurements from which tests of parallel transport models have been made. It is found that a flux-limited model agrees best with the data at all collisionalities, while...


Physics of Plasmas | 2006

Progress toward fully noninductive, high beta conditions in DIII-D

M. Murakami; M. R. Wade; C. M. Greenfield; T.C. Luce; J.R. Ferron; H.E. St. John; J.C. DeBoo; W.W. Heidbrink; Y. Luo; M. A. Makowski; T.H. Osborne; C. C. Petty; P.A. Politzer; S.L. Allen; M. E. Austin; K.H. Burrell; T. A. Casper; E. J. Doyle; A. M. Garofalo; P. Gohil; I.A. Gorelov; R. J. Groebner; A.W. Hyatt; R. J. Jayakumar; K. Kajiwara; C. Kessel; J.E. Kinsey; R.J. La Haye; L. L. Lao; A.W. Leonard

The DIII-D Advanced Tokamak (AT) program in the DIII-D tokamak [J. L. Luxon, Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion Research, 1986, Vol. I (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1987), p. 159] is aimed at developing a scientific basis for steady-state, high-performance operation in future devices. This requires simultaneously achieving 100% noninductive operation with high self-driven bootstrap current fraction and toroidal beta. Recent progress in this area includes demonstration of 100% noninductive conditions with toroidal beta, βT=3.6%, normalized beta, βN=3.5, and confinement factor, H89=2.4 with the plasma current driven completely by bootstrap, neutral beam current drive, and electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD). The equilibrium reconstructions indicate that the noninductive current profile is well aligned, with little inductively driven current remaining anywhere in the plasma. The current balance calculation improved with beam ion redistribution that was supported by recent fast ion diagno...


Physics of Plasmas | 2005

Advances in understanding quiescent H-mode plasmas in DIII-D

K.H. Burrell; W.P. West; E. J. Doyle; M. E. Austin; T. A. Casper; P. Gohil; C. M. Greenfield; R. J. Groebner; A.W. Hyatt; R. J. Jayakumar; D. H. Kaplan; L. L. Lao; A.W. Leonard; M. A. Makowski; G.R. McKee; T.H. Osborne; P. B. Snyder; W. M. Solomon; D. M. Thomas; T.L. Rhodes; E. J. Strait; M.R. Wade; G. Wang; L. Zeng

Recent QH-mode research on DIII-D [J. L. Luxon et al., Plasma Physics and Controlled Nuclear Fusion Research 1996 (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1987), Vol. I, p. 159] has used the peeling-ballooning modes model of edge magnetohydrodynamic stability as a working hypothesis to organize the data; several predictions of this theory are consistent with the experimental results. Current ramping results indicate that QH modes operate near the edge current limit set by peeling modes. This operating point explains why QH mode is easier to get at lower plasma currents. Power scans have shown a saturation of edge pressure with increasing power input. This allows QH-mode plasmas to remain stable to edge localized modes (ELMs) to the highest powers used in DIII-D. At present, the mechanism for this saturation is unknown; if the edge harmonic oscillation (EHO) is playing a role here, the physics is not a simple amplitude dependence. The increase in edge stability with plasma triangularity predicted by th...


Nuclear Fusion | 2009

Off-axis neutral beam current drive for advanced scenario development in DIII-D

M. Murakami; Jin Myung Park; C. C. Petty; T.C. Luce; W.W. Heidbrink; T.H. Osborne; R. Prater; M. R. Wade; P.M. Anderson; M. E. Austin; N.H. Brooks; R.V. Budny; C. Challis; J.C. DeBoo; J.S. deGrassie; J.R. Ferron; P. Gohil; J. Hobirk; C.T. Holcomb; E.M. Hollmann; R.-M. Hong; A.W. Hyatt; J. Lohr; M. J. Lanctot; M. A. Makowski; D. McCune; P.A. Politzer; J. T. Scoville; H.E. St. John; T. Suzuki

Modification of the two existing DIII-D neutral beamlines is planned to allow vertical steering to provide off-axis neutral beam current drive (NBCD) peaked as far off-axis as half the plasma minor radius. New calculations for a downward-steered beam indicate strong current drive with good localization off-axis so long as the toroidal magnetic field, BT, and the plasma current, Ip, point in the same direction. This is due to good alignment of neutral beam injection (NBI) with the local pitch of the magnetic field lines. This model has been tested experimentally on DIII-D by injecting equatorially mounted NBs into reduced size plasmas that are vertically displaced with respect to the vessel midplane. The existence of off-axis NBCD is evident in the changes seen in sawtooth behaviour in the internal inductance. By shifting the plasma upwards or downwards, or by changing the sign of the toroidal field, off-axis NBCD profiles measured with motional Stark effect data and internal loop voltage show a difference in amplitude (40–45%) consistent with differences predicted by the changed NBI alignment with respect to the helicity of the magnetic field lines. The effects of NBI direction relative to field line helicity can be large even in ITER: off-axis NBCD can be increased by more than 30% if the BT direction is reversed. Modification of the DIII-D NB system will strongly support scenario development for ITER and future tokamaks as well as provide flexible scientific tools for understanding transport, energetic particles and heating and current drive.


Physics of Plasmas | 2006

Core barrier formation near integer q surfaces in DIII-D

M. E. Austin; K.H. Burrell; R. E. Waltz; K. W. Gentle; P. Gohil; C. M. Greenfield; R. J. Groebner; W.W. Heidbrink; Y. Luo; J.E. Kinsey; M. A. Makowski; G.R. McKee; R. Nazikian; C. C. Petty; R. Prater; T.L. Rhodes; M. W. Shafer; M. A. Van Zeeland

Recent DIII-D experiments have significantly improved the understanding of internal transport barriers (ITBs) that are triggered close to the time when an integer value of the minimum in q is crossed. While this phenomenon has been observed on many tokamaks, the extensive transport and fluctuation diagnostics on DIII-D have permitted a detailed study of the generation mechanisms of q-triggered ITBs as pertaining to turbulence suppression dynamics, shear flows, and energetic particle modes. In these discharges, the evolution of the q profile is measured using motional Stark effect polarimetry and the integer qmin crossings are further pinpointed in time by the observation of Alfven cascades. High time resolution measurements of the ion and electron temperatures and the toroidal rotation show that the start of improved confinement is simultaneous in all three channels, and that this event precedes the traversal of integer qmin by 5–20ms. There is no significant low-frequency magnetohydrodynamic activity pri...


Nuclear Fusion | 2002

Detailed measurements of the electron cyclotron current drive efficiency on DIII-D

C. C. Petty; R. Prater; J. Lohr; T.C. Luce; W.R. Fox; R.W. Harvey; J.E. Kinsey; L. L. Lao; M. A. Makowski

Electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD) experiments on the DIII-D tokamak are solidifying the physics basis for localized, off-axis current drive, the goal being to validate a predictive model for ECCD. The ECCD profiles are determined from the magnetic field pitch angles measured by motional Stark effect polarimetry. The measured ECCD switches from the co- to the counter-direction as the toroidal injection angle is varied with a profile width that is in accordance with ray tracing calculations. Tests of electron trapping in low beta plasmas show that the ECCD efficiency decreases rapidly as the deposition is moved off-axis and towards the outboard side of the plasma, but the detrimental effects of electron trapping on the current drive are greatly reduced in high beta plasmas. Overall, the measured ECCD is in good agreement with theoretical calculations using a quasilinear Fokker–Planck code over a wide range of injection angles and plasma parameters.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2010

Local properties of the magnetic field in a snowflake divertor

D. D. Ryutov; M. A. Makowski; M. V. Umansky

The power-law series for the poloidal magnetic flux function, up to the third-order terms, is presented for the case where two nulls of the poloidal magnetic field are separated by a small distance, as in a snowflake divertor. Distinct from the earlier results, no assumptions about the field symmetry are made. Conditions for the realization of an exact snowflake are expressed in terms of the coefficients of the power series. It is shown that, by a proper choice of the coordinate frame in the poloidal plane, one can obtain efficient similarity solutions for the separatrices and flux surfaces in the divertor region: the whole variety of flux surface shapes can be characterized by a single dimensionless parameter. Transition from a snowflake-minus to a snowflake-plus configuration in the case of no particular symmetry is described. The effect of the finite toroidal current density in the divertor region is assessed for the case of no particular symmetry.

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M. E. Austin

University of Texas at Austin

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R. J. Jayakumar

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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C.T. Holcomb

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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S.L. Allen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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