S. Horne
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by S. Horne.
Physics of Plasmas | 1994
Ian H. Hutchinson; R. L. Boivin; F. Bombarda; P.T. Bonoli; S. Fairfax; C. Fiore; Jennifer Ann Goetz; S. Golovato; R. Granetz; M. Greenwald; S. Horne; A. Hubbard; James H. Irby; B. LaBombard; B. Lipschultz; E. Marmar; G. McCracken; M. Porkolab; J. E. Rice; J. A. Snipes; Y. Takase; J. L. Terry; S.M. Wolfe; C. Christensen; D. Garnier; M. Graf; T. Hsu; T. Luke; M. May; A. Niemczewski
Early operation of the Alcator‐C‐MOD tokamak [I.H. Hutchinson, Proceedings of IEEE 13th Symposium on Fusion Engineering, Knoxville, TN, edited by M. Lubell, M. Nestor, and S. Vaughan (Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, New York, 1990), Vol. 1, p. 13] is surveyed. Reliable operation, with plasma current up to 1 MA, has been obtained, despite the massive conducting superstructure and the associated error fields. However, vertical disruptions are not slowed by the long vessel time constant. With pellet fueling, peak densities up to 9×1020 m−3 have been attained and ‘‘snakes’’ are often seen. Initial characterization of divertor and scrape‐off layer is presented and indicates approximately Bohm diffusion. The edge plasma shows a wealth of marfe‐like phenomena, including a transition to detachment from the divertor plates with accompanying radiative divertor regions. Energy confinement generally appears to exceed the expectations of neo‐Alcator scaling. A transition to Ohmic H mode has been observed. Ion cyclotron heating experiments have demonstrated good power coupling, in agreement with theory.
Journal of Nuclear Materials | 1997
B. LaBombard; Jennifer Ann Goetz; Ian H. Hutchinson; D. Jablonski; J. Kesner; C. Kurz; B. Lipschultz; G. McCracken; A. Niemczewski; J. L. Terry; A. J. Allen; R. L. Boivin; F. Bombarda; P.T. Bonoli; C. Christensen; C. Fiore; D. Garnier; S. Golovato; R. Granetz; M. Greenwald; S. Horne; A. Hubbard; James H. Irby; D. Lo; D. Lumma; E. Marmar; M. May; A. Mazurenko; R. Nachtrieb; H. Ohkawa
Abstract Transport physics in the divertor and scrape-off layer of Alcator C-Mod is investigated for a wide range of plasma conditions. Parallel (∥) transport topics include: low recycling, high-recycling, and detached regimes, thermoelectric currents, asymmetric heat fluxes driven by thermoelectric currents, and reversed divertor flows. Perpendicular (⊥) transport topics include: expected and measured scalings of ⊥ gradients with local conditions, estimated χ⊥ profiles and scalings, divertor neutral retention effects, and L-mode/H-mode effects. Key results are: (i) classical ∥ transport is obeyed with ion-neutral momentum coupling effects, (ii) ⊥ heat transport is proportional to local gradients, (iii) χ⊥ αTe−0.6 n−0.6 L−0.7 in L-mode, insensitive to toroidal field, (iv) χ⊥ is dependent on divertor neutral retention, (v) H-mode transport barrier effects partially extend inside the SOL, (vi) inside/outside divertor asymmetries may be caused by a thermoelectric instability, and (vii) reversed ∥ flows depend on divertor asymmetries and their implicit ionization source imbalances.
Physics of Plasmas | 1995
B. LaBombard; Jennifer Ann Goetz; C. Kurz; D. Jablonski; B. Lipschultz; G. McCracken; A. Niemczewski; R. L. Boivin; F. Bombarda; C. Christensen; S. Fairfax; C. Fiore; D. Garnier; M. Graf; S. Golovato; R. Granetz; M. Greenwald; S. Horne; A. Hubbard; Ian H. Hutchinson; James H. Irby; J. Kesner; T. Luke; E. Marmar; M. May; P. O’Shea; M. Porkolab; J. Reardon; J. E. Rice; J. Schachter
Detailed measurements and transport analysis of divertor conditions in Alcator C‐Mod [Phys. Plasmas 1, 1511 (1994)] are presented for a range of line‐averaged densities, 0.7<ne<2.2×1020 m−3. Three parallel heat transport regimes are evident in the scrape‐off layer: sheath‐limited conduction, high‐recycling divertor, and detached divertor, which can coexist in the same discharge. Local cross‐field pressure gradients are found to scale simply with a local electron temperature. This scaling is consistent with classical electron parallel conduction being balanced by anomalous cross‐field transport (χ⊥∼0.2 m2 s−1) proportional to the local pressure gradient. A 60%–80% of divertor power is radiated in attached discharges, approaching 100% in detached discharges. Detachment occurs when the heat flux to the plate is low and the plasma pressure is high (Te∼5 eV). High neutral pressures in the divertor are nearly always present (1–20 mTorr), sufficient to remove parallel momentum via ion–neutral collisions.
Physics of Fluids | 1988
S. Golovato; K. Brau; J. A. Casey; J. Coleman; M. J. Gerver; W. C. Guss; G. Hallock; S. Horne; J. H. Irby; R. Kumazawa; J. Kesner; Barton Lane; J. Machuzak; T. Moran; R. Myer; R. S. Post; E. Sevillano; D. K. Smith; J. D. Sullivan; R. Torti; L. Wang; Y. Yasaka; X. Z. Yao; J. Zielinski
Plasma production and heating in the central cell of the Tara tandem mirror [Nucl. Fusion 22, 549 (1982); Plasma Physics and Controlled Nuclear Fusion Research, 1986, Proceedings of the 11th International Conference, Kyoto, Japan (IAEA, Vienna, 1987), Vol. 2, p. 251] have been studied. Using radio‐frequency excitation by a slot antenna in the ion cyclotron frequency range (ICRF), plasmas with a peak β⊥ of 3%, density of 4×1012 cm−3, ion temperature of 800 eV, and electron temperature of 75–100 eV were routinely produced. The plasma radius decreased with increasing ICRF power, causing reduced ICRF coupling and saturation of the plasma beta. About 70% of the applied ICRF power can be accounted for in direct heating of both ions and electrons. Wave field measurements have identified the applied ICRF to be the slow, ion cyclotron wave. In operation without end plugging, the plasma parameters were limited by poor axial confinement and the requirements for maintenance of magnetohydrodynamic stability and micros...
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 1993
J. H. Irby; S. Horne; Ian H. Hutchinson; P. Stek
A 2D full-wave simulation of ordinary mode propagation has been developed in an effort to model effects seen in reflectometry experiments but not properly explained by 1D analysis. The geometric fall-off of the fields, together with the effects of both refraction and diffraction, considerably modify the results obtained. The now commonly seen experimental observations of large amplitude and phase variations of the echo signal and occasional ramping of the phase can be explained by these 2D effects in the presence of fluctuations.
Physics of Plasmas | 1997
Y. Takase; R. L. Boivin; F. Bombarda; P.T. Bonoli; C. Christensen; C. Fiore; D. Garnier; Jennifer Ann Goetz; S. Golovato; R. Granetz; M. Greenwald; S. Horne; A. Hubbard; Ian H. Hutchinson; James H. Irby; B. LaBombard; B. Lipschultz; E. Marmar; M. May; A. Mazurenko; G. McCracken; P. O’Shea; M. Porkolab; James Christian Reardon; J. E. Rice; C. Rost; J. Schachter; J. A. Snipes; P. Stek; J. L. Terry
Enhanced confinement modes up to a toroidal field of BT=8 T have been studied with up to 3.5 MW of radiofrequency (rf) heating power in the ion cyclotron range of frequencies (ICRF) at 80 MHz. H-mode is observed when the edge temperature exceeds a threshold value. The high confinement mode (H-mode) with higher confinement enhancement factors (H) and longer duration became possible after boronization by reducing the radiated power from the main plasma. A quasi-steady state with high confinement (H=2.0), high normalized beta (βN=1.5), low radiated power fraction (Pradmain/Ploss=0.3), and low effective charge (Zeff=1.5) has been obtained in Enhanced Dα H-mode. This type of H-mode has enhanced levels of continuous Dα emission and very little or no edge localized mode (ELM) activity, and reduced core particle confinement time relative to ELM-free H-mode. The pellet enhanced performance (PEP) mode is obtained by combining core fueling with pellet injection and core heating. A highly peaked pressure profile with...
Physics of Plasmas | 1996
J.A. Goetz; C. Kurz; B. LaBombard; B. Lipschultz; A. Niemczewski; G. McCracken; J. L. Terry; R. L. Boivin; F. Bombarda; P.T. Bonoli; C. Fiore; S. Golovato; R. Granetz; M. Greenwald; S. Horne; A. Hubbard; Ian H. Hutchinson; J. Irby; E. Marmar; M. Porkolab; J. E. Rice; J. A. Snipes; Y. Takase; R. Watterson; B. Welch; S. M. Wolfe; C. Christensen; D. Garnier; D. Jablonski; D. Lo
The divertor of the Alcator C‐Mod tokamak [Phys. Plasmas 1, 1511 (1994)] routinely radiates a large fraction of the power entering the scrape‐off layer. This dissipative divertor operation occurs whether the divertor is detached or not, and large volumetric radiative emissivities, up to 60 MW m−3 in ion cyclotron range of frequency (ICRF) heated discharges, have been measured using bolometer arrays. An analysis of both Ohmic and ICRF‐heated discharges has demonstrated some of the relative merits of detached divertor operation versus high‐recycling divertor operation. An advantage of detached divertor operation is that the power flux to the divertor plates is decreased even further than its already low value. Some disadvantages are that volumetric losses outside the separatrix in the divertor region are decreased, the neutral compression ratio is decreased, and the penetration efficiency of impurities increases.
Physics of Plasmas | 2014
M. Greenwald; A. Bader; S. G. Baek; M. Bakhtiari; Harold Barnard; W. Beck; W. Bergerson; I.O. Bespamyatnov; P.T. Bonoli; D. L. Brower; D. Brunner; W. Burke; J. Candy; M. Churchill; I. Cziegler; A. Diallo; A. Dominguez; B.P. Duval; E. Edlund; P. Ennever; D. Ernst; I. Faust; C. Fiore; T. Fredian; O.E. Garcia; C. Gao; J.A. Goetz; T. Golfinopoulos; R. Granetz; O. Grulke
The object of this review is to summarize the achievements of research on the Alcator C-Mod tokamak [Hutchinson et al., Phys. Plasmas 1, 1511 (1994) and Marmar, Fusion Sci. Technol. 51, 261 (2007)] and to place that research in the context of the quest for practical fusion energy. C-Mod is a compact, high-field tokamak, whose unique design and operating parameters have produced a wealth of new and important results since it began operation in 1993, contributing data that extends tests of critical physical models into new parameter ranges and into new regimes. Using only high-power radio frequency (RF) waves for heating and current drive with innovative launching structures, C-Mod operates routinely at reactor level power densities and achieves plasma pressures higher than any other toroidal confinement device. C-Mod spearheaded the development of the vertical-target divertor and has always operated with high-Z metal plasma facing components—approaches subsequently adopted for ITER. C-Mod has made ground-breaking discoveries in divertor physics and plasma-material interactions at reactor-like power and particle fluxes and elucidated the critical role of cross-field transport in divertor operation, edge flows and the tokamak density limit. C-Mod developed the I-mode and the Enhanced Dα H-mode regimes, which have high performance without large edge localized modes and with pedestal transport self-regulated by short-wavelength electromagnetic waves. C-Mod has carried out pioneering studies of intrinsic rotation and demonstrated that self-generated flow shear can be strong enough in some cases to significantly modify transport. C-Mod made the first quantitative link between the pedestal temperature and the H-modes performance, showing that the observed self-similar temperature profiles were consistent with critical-gradient-length theories and followed up with quantitative tests of nonlinear gyrokinetic models. RF research highlights include direct experimental observation of ion cyclotron range of frequency (ICRF) mode-conversion, ICRF flow drive, demonstration of lower-hybrid current drive at ITER-like densities and fields and, using a set of novel diagnostics, extensive validation of advanced RF codes. Disruption studies on C-Mod provided the first observation of non-axisymmetric halo currents and non-axisymmetric radiation in mitigated disruptions. A summary of important achievements and discoveries are included.
Physics of Plasmas | 1997
P.T. Bonoli; P. O’Shea; M. Brambilla; S. Golovato; A. Hubbard; M. Porkolab; Y. Takase; R. L. Boivin; F. Bombarda; C. Christensen; C. Fiore; D. Garnier; J.A. Goetz; R. Granetz; M. Greenwald; S. Horne; Ian H. Hutchinson; J. Irby; D. Jablonski; B. LaBombard; B. Lipschultz; E. Marmar; M. May; A. Mazurenko; G. McCracken; R. Nachtrieb; A. Niemczewski; H. Ohkawa; D. Pappas; James Christian Reardon
Highly localized direct electron heating [full width at half-maximum (FWHM)≅0.2a] via mode converted ion Bernstein waves has been observed in the Alcator C-Mod Tokamak [I. H. Hutchinson et al., Phys. Plasmas 1, 1511 (1994)]. Electron heating at or near the plasma center (r/a⩾0.3) has been observed in H(3He) discharges at B0=(6.0–6.5) T and ne(0)≅1.8×1020 m−3. [Here, the minority ion species is indicated parenthetically.] Off-axis heating (r/a⩾0.5) has also been observed in D(3He) plasmas at B0=7.9 T. The concentration of 3He in these experiments was in the range of n3He/ne≅(0.2–0.3) and the locations of the mode conversion layer and electron heating peak could be controlled by changing the 3He concentration or toroidal magnetic field (B0). The electron heating profiles were deduced using a rf modulation technique. Detailed comparisons with one-dimensional and toroidal full-wave models in the ion cyclotron range of frequencies have been carried out. One-dimensional full-wave code predictions were found to ...
Fusion Technology | 1996
Ian H. Hutchinson; S. Horne; Gerasimos Tinios; S.M. Wolfe; R. Granetz
AbstractA general approach to plasma shape control and its application to the Alcator C-Mod tokamak are described. The method is linear in the magnetic measurements but is entirely algorithmic, requiring no fitting of databases. Estimators of the shape parameters are based on a complete vacuum reconstruction of the flux, so that control points can be defined anywhere within the reconstructed region. The conversion of flux differences into flux-surface distances and the calculation of appropriate coil currents for controlling each parameter require a specific reference equilibrium. However, the control is very insensitive to the choice of reference equilibrium provided that the shape parameters are chosen appropriately. Control current combinations that are orthogonal, in the sense of changing one parameter and not the others, are obtained. Experiments with these estimators and controllers show them to be accurate and robust over a wide range of plasma shapes.