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Dive into the research topics where Shigeru Inagaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Shigeru Inagaki.


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Observation of the parametric-modulational instability between the drift-wave fluctuation and azimuthally symmetric sheared radial electric field oscillation in a cylindrical laboratory plasma

Y. Nagashima; S.-I. Itoh; Shunjiro Shinohara; Masayuki Fukao; A. Fujisawa; Kenichiro Terasaka; Yoshinobu Kawai; G. R. Tynan; P. H. Diamond; M. Yagi; Shigeru Inagaki; Takuma Yamada; K. Itoh

Observation of the parametric-modulational interaction between the drift-wave fluctuation (7–8 kHz) and azimuthally symmetric sheared radial electric field structure (∼0.4 kHz) in a cylindrical laboratory plasma is presented. Oscillation of the sheared radial electric field is synchronized at modulations of the radial wave number and Reynolds stress per mass density of the drift-wave spectrum. Bispectral analysis at the location where the sheared radial electric field has finite radial wave numbers shows that nonlinear energy transfers from the drift wave to the sheared radial electric field occur. Nonlocal energy transfers of fluctuations via “channel of the azimuthally symmetric sheared radial electric field” in spectral space as well as real space are discovered.


Nuclear Fusion | 2006

Comparison of transient electron heat transport in LHD helical and JT-60U tokamak plasmas

Shigeru Inagaki; H. Takenaga; K. Ida; A. Isayama; N. Tamura; T. Shimozuma; Y. Kamada; S. Kubo; Y. Miura; Y. Nagayama; K. Kawahata; S. Sudo; K. Ohkubo

Transient transport experiments are performed in plasmas with and without internal transport barriers (ITB) on LHD and JT-60U. The dependence of χe on the electron temperature, Te, and on the electron temperature gradient, ∇Te, is analysed with an empirical non-linear heat transport model. In plasmas without an ITB, two different types of non-linearity of the electron heat transport are observed from cold/heat pulse propagation: the χe depends on Te and ∇Te in JT-60U, while the ∇Te dependence is weak in LHD. Inside the ITB region, there is none or weak ∇Te dependence both in LHD and JT-60U. Growth of the cold pulse driven by the negative Te dependence of χe is observed inside the ITB region (LHD) and near the boundary of the ITB region (JT-60U).


Nuclear Fusion | 2007

Impact of nonlocal electron heat transport on the high temperature plasmas of LHD

N. Tamura; Shigeru Inagaki; K. Tanaka; Clive Michael; T. Tokuzawa; T. Shimozuma; S. Kubo; R. Sakamoto; K. Ida; Kimitaka Itoh; D. V. Kalinina; S. Sudo; Y. Nagayama; K. Kawahata; A. Komori

Edge cooling experiments with a tracer-encapsulated solid pellet in the large helical device (LHD) show a significant rise in core electron temperature (the maximum rise is around 1 keV) as well as in many tokamaks. This experimental result indicates the possible presence of the nonlocality of electron heat transport in plasmas where turbulence as a cause of anomalous transport dominates. The nonlocal electron temperature rise in the LHD takes place in almost the same parametric domain (e.g. in a low density) as in the tokamaks. Meanwhile, the experimental results of LHD show some new aspects of nonlocal electron temperature rise, for example the delay in the nonlocal rise of core electron temperature relative to the pellet penetration time increases with the increase both in the collisionality in the core plasma and the electron temperature gradient scale length in the outer region of the plasma.


Nuclear Fusion | 2013

How is turbulence intensity determined by macroscopic variables in a toroidal plasma

Shigeru Inagaki; T. Tokuzawa; Noriko Tamura; S.-I. Itoh; Tatsuya Kobayashi; K. Ida; T. Shimozuma; S. Kubo; K. Tanaka; T. Ido; A. Shimizu; H. Tsuchiya; Naohiro Kasuya; Y. Nagayama; K. Kawahata; S. Sudo; H. Yamada; A. Fujisawa; K. Itoh

We report observations of the dynamic response of micro-fluctuations and turbulent flux to a low-frequency heating power modulation in the Large Helical Device. The responses of heat flux and micro-fluctuation intensity differ from that of the change in temperature gradient. This result violates the local transport model, where turbulence is determined by the local temperature gradient. A new relationship between flux, gradient and turbulence is found. In addition to the temperature gradient, the heating rate is proposed as a new, direct controlling parameter of turbulence to explain the fast response of turbulence against periodic modulation of heating power.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2007

Fine positioning of a poloidal probe array.

Takuma Yamada; Y. Nagashima; Shigeru Inagaki; Yoshinobu Kawai; Masatoshi Yagi; S.-I. Itoh; T. Maruta; Shunjiro Shinohara; Kenichiro Terasaka; M. Kawaguchi; Masayuki Fukao; A. Fujisawa; K. Itoh

Multipoint detection is an essential requirement for investigating plasma turbulence which is a highly nonlinear phenomenon in space and time. We have fabricated an array of 64-channel poloidal probes surrounding the linear cylindrical plasma named LMD-U in order to study turbulence properties, particularly the nonlinear mode couplings, in the domain of poloidal wave number and frequency. However, misalignments of probe tips produce spurious modes, which do not exist in the real plasma, to distort the precise wave number measurements. The paper presents the description of the 64-channel poloidal probe array with means to adjust the probe positions, with discussion on the effects of the misalignments on the wave number measurements.


Scientific Reports | 2016

A Concept of Cross-Ferroic Plasma Turbulence

Shigeru Inagaki; T. Kobayashi; Y. Kosuga; S. I. Itoh; Tomohiro Mitsuzono; Y. Nagashima; Hiroyuki Arakawa; Takuma Yamada; Yudai Miwa; Naohiro Kasuya; Makoto Sasaki; M. Lesur; A. Fujisawa; K. Itoh

The variety of scalar and vector fields in laboratory and nature plasmas is formed by plasma turbulence. Drift-wave fluctuations, driven by density gradients in magnetized plasmas, are known to relax the density gradient while they can generate flows. On the other hand, the sheared flow in the direction of magnetic fields causes Kelvin-Helmholtz type instabilities, which mix particle and momentum. These different types of fluctuations coexist in laboratory and nature, so that the multiple mechanisms for structural formation exist in extremely non-equilibrium plasmas. Here we report the discovery of a new order in plasma turbulence, in which chained structure formation is realized by cross-interaction between inhomogeneities of scalar and vector fields. The concept of cross-ferroic turbulence is developed, and the causal relation in the multiple mechanisms behind structural formation is identified, by measuring the relaxation rate and dissipation power caused by the complex turbulence-driven flux.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Observation of multi-scale turbulence and non-local transport in LHD plasmas

T. Tokuzawa; Shigeru Inagaki; K. Ida; K. Itoh; T. Ido; A. Shimizu; H. Takahashi; S. Kitajima; Noriko Tamura; M. Yoshinuma; H. Tsuchiya; I. Yamada; K. Tanaka; T. Akiyama; Y. Nagayama; K. Kawahata; K.Y. Watanabe; H. Yamada

We have studied two types of spatio-temporal turbulence dynamics in plasmas in the Large Helical Device, based on turbulence measurements with high spatial and temporal resolution. Applying conditional ensemble-averaging to a plasma with Edge-Localized Modes (ELMs), fast radial inward propagation of a micro-scale turbulence front is observed just after ELM event, and the propagation speed is evaluated as ∼100 m/s. A self-organized radial electric field structure is observed in an electrode biasing experiment, and it is found to realize a multi-valued state. The curvature of the radial electric field is found to play an important role for turbulence reduction.


Nuclear Fusion | 2009

Dynamics of ion internal transport barrier in LHD heliotron and JT-60U tokamak plasmas

K. Ida; Yoshiteru Sakamoto; M. Yoshinuma; H. Takenaga; K. Nagaoka; N. Hayashi; N. Oyama; M. Osakabe; M. Yokoyama; H. Funaba; N. Tamura; K. Tanaka; Y. Takeiri; K. Ikeda; K. Tsumori; O. Kaneko; K. Itoh; Shigeru Inagaki; T. Kobuchi; A. Isayama; Tatsuya Suzuki; T. Fujita; G. Matsunaga; K. Shinohara; Y. Koide; M. Yoshida; S. Ide; Y. Kamada

Dynamics of ion internal transport barrier (ITB) formation and impurity transport both in the Large Helical Device (LHD) heliotron and in the JT-60U tokamak are described. Significant differences between heliotron and tokamak plasmas are observed. The location of the ITB moves outwards during the ITB formation regardless of the sign of magnetic shear in JT-60U, and the ITB becomes more localized in plasmas with negative magnetic shear. In LHD, a low Te/Ti ratio (<1) of the target plasma with high power heating is found to be necessary to achieve the ITB plasma and the ITB location tends to expand outwards or inwards depending on the condition of the target plasmas. Associated with the formation of the ITB, the carbon density tends to be peaked due to inward convection in JT-60U while the carbon density becomes hollow due to outward convection in LHD. The outward convection observed in LHD contradicts the prediction by neoclassical theory.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Strong Destabilization of Stable Modes with a Half-Frequency Associated with Chirping Geodesic Acoustic Modes in the Large Helical Device

T. Ido; K. Itoh; M. Osakabe; M. Lesur; A. Shimizu; K. Ogawa; K. Toi; M. Nishiura; Kato S; Makoto Sasaki; K. Ida; Shigeru Inagaki; S.-I. Itoh

Abrupt and strong excitation of a mode has been observed when the frequency of a chirping energetic-particle driven geodesic acoustic mode (EGAM) reaches twice the geodesic acoustic mode (GAM) frequency. The frequency of the secondary mode is the GAM frequency, which is a half-frequency of the primary EGAM. Based on the analysis of spatial structures, the secondary mode is identified as a GAM. The phase relation between the secondary mode and the primary EGAM is locked, and the evolution of the growth rate of the secondary mode indicates nonlinear excitation. The results suggest that the primary mode (EGAM) contributes to nonlinear destabilization of a subcritical mode.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Reconstruction of high temporal resolution Thomson scattering data during a modulated electron cyclotron resonance heating using conditional averaging

T. Kobayashi; K. Ida; K. Itoh; M. Yoshinuma; Chanho Moon; Shigeru Inagaki; I. Yamada; H. Funaba; R. Yasuhara; H. Tsuchiya; S. Ohdachi; Y. Yoshimura; H. Igami; T. Shimozuma; S. Kubo; T. I. Tsujimura

This paper provides a software application of the sampling scope concept for fusion research. The time evolution of Thomson scattering data is reconstructed with a high temporal resolution during a modulated electron cyclotron resonance heating (MECH) phase. The amplitude profile and the delay time profile of the heat pulse propagation are obtained from the reconstructed signal for discharges having on-axis and off-axis MECH depositions. The results are found to be consistent with the MECH deposition.

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Masatoshi Yagi

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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