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Dive into the research topics where T. Markovic is active.

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Featured researches published by T. Markovic.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2016

Status of the COMPASS tokamak and characterization of the first H-mode

R. Panek; J. Adamek; M. Aftanas; P. Bilkova; P. Bohm; F. Brochard; P. Cahyna; J. Cavalier; R. Dejarnac; M Dimitrova; O. Grover; J Harrison; P. Hacek; J. Havlicek; A. Havranek; J. Horacek; M. Hron; M. Imrisek; F. Janky; A. Kirk; M. Komm; K. Kovařík; J. Krbec; L Kripner; T. Markovic; K. Mitosinkova; Jan Mlynář; D. Naydenkova; M. Peterka; J. Seidl

This paper summarizes the status of the COMPASS tokamak, its comprehensive diagnostic equipment and plasma scenarios as a baseline for the future studies. The former COMPASS-D tokamak was in operation at UKAEA Culham, UK in 1992–2002. Later, the device was transferred to the Institute of Plasma Physics of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (IPP AS CR), where it was installed during 2006–2011. Since 2012 the device has been in a full operation with Type-I and Type-III ELMy H-modes as a base scenario. This enables together with the ITER-like plasma shape and flexible NBI heating system (two injectors enabling co- or balanced injection) to perform ITER relevant studies in different parameter range to the other tokamaks (ASDEX-Upgrade, DIII-D, JET) and to contribute to the ITER scallings. In addition to the description of the device, current status and the main diagnostic equipment, the paper focuses on the characterization of the Ohmic as well as NBI-assisted H-modes. Moreover, Edge Localized Modes (ELMs) are categorized based on their frequency dependence on power density flowing across separatrix. The filamentary structure of ELMs is studied and the parallel heat flux in individual filaments is measured by probes on the outer mid-plane and in the divertor. The measurements are supported by observation of ELM and inter-ELM filaments by an ultra-fast camera.


Nuclear Fusion | 2016

Scaling of the MHD perturbation amplitude required to trigger a disruption and predictions for ITER

P. de Vries; G. Pautasso; E. Nardon; P. Cahyna; S. Gerasimov; J. Havlicek; T. C. Hender; Gta Guido Huijsmans; M. Lehnen; M. Maraschek; T. Markovic; J. A. Snipes

The amplitude of locked instabilities, likely magnetic islands, seen as precursors to disruptions has been studied using data from the JET, ASDEX Upgrade and COMPASS tokamaks. It was found that the thermal quench, that often initiates the disruption, is triggered when the amplitude has reached a distinct level. This information can be used to determine thresholds for simple disruption prediction schemes. The measured amplitude in part depends on the distance of the perturbation to the measurement coils. Hence the threshold for the measured amplitude depends on the mode location (i.e. the rational q-surface) and thus indirectly on parameters such as the edge safety factor, q 95, and the internal inductance, li(3), that determine the shape of the q-profile. These dependencies can be used to set the disruption thresholds more precisely. For the ITER baseline scenario, with typically q 95 = 3.2, li(3) = 0.9 and taking into account the position of the measurement coils on ITER, the maximum allowable measured locked mode amplitude normalized to engineering parameters was estimated to be aB ML(r c)/I p = 0.92 m mT/MA, or directly as a fraction edge poloidal magnetic field: B ML(r c)/B θ (a) = 5 10−3. But these values decrease for operation at higher q 95 or lower li(3). The analysis found furthermore that the above empirical criterion to trigger a thermal quench is more consistent with a criterion derived with the concept of a critical island size, i.e. the thermal quench seemed to be triggered at a distinct island width.


Nuclear Fusion | 2016

Measurements and modelling of plasma response field to RMP on the COMPASS tokamak

T. Markovic; Yueqiang Liu; P. Cahyna; R. Panek; M. Peterka; M. Aftanas; P. Bilkova; P. Bohm; M. Imrisek; P. Hacek; J. Havlicek; A. Havranek; M. Komm; J. Urban; V. Weinzettl

It has been shown on several tokamaks that application of a resonant magnetic perturbation (RMP) field to the plasma can lead to suppression or mitigation of edge-localized mode (ELM) instabilities. Due to the rotation of the plasma in the RMP field reference system, currents are induced on resonant surfaces within the plasma, consequently screening the original perturbation. In this work, the extensive set of 104 saddle loops installed on the COMPASS tokamak is utilized to measure the plasma response field for two n = 2 RMP configurations of different poloidal mode m spectra. It is shown that spatially the response field is in opposite phase to the original perturbation, and that the poloidal profile of the measured response field does not depend on the poloidal profile of the applied RMP. Simulations of the plasma response by the linear MHD code MARS-F (Liu et al 2000 Phys. Plasmas 7 3681) reveal that both of the studied RMP configurations are well screened by the plasma. Comparison of measured plasma response field with the simulated one shows a good agreement across the majority of poloidal angles, with the exception of the midplane low-field side area, where discrepancy is seen.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2018

Effect of the resonant magnetic perturbation on the plasma parameters in COMPASS tokamak’s divertor region

M Dimitrova; P. Cahyna; M. Peterka; E Hasan; Tsv K Popov; P Ivanova; E Vasileva; R. Panek; J. Cavalier; J. Seidl; T. Markovic; J. Havlicek; R. Dejarnac; V. Weinzettl; P. Hacek; M. Tomes

The resonant magnetic perturbation (RMP) has proven to be a useful way to suppress edge-localized modes that under certain conditions can damage the device by the large power fluxes carried from the bulk plasma to the wall. The effect of RMP on the L-mode plasma parameters in the divertor region of the COMPASS tokamak was studied using the array of 39 Langmuir probes embedded into the divertor target. The current-voltage (IV) probe characteristics were processed by the first-derivative probe technique to obtain the plasma potential and the electron energy distribution function (EEDF) which was approximated by a bi-Maxwellian EEDF with a low-energy (4-6 eV) fraction and a high-energy (11-35 eV) one, the both factions having similar electron density. Clear splitting was observed during the RMP pulse in the low-field-side scrape-off-layer profiles of the floating potential U fl and the ion saturation current density J sat; these two quantities were obtained both by direct continuous measurement and by evaluation of the IV characteristics of probes with swept bias. The negative peaks of U fl induced by RMP spatially overlaps with the local minima of J sat (and n e) rather than with its local maxima which is partly caused by the spatial variation of the plasma potential and partly by the changed shape of the EEDF. The effective temperature of the whole EEDF is not correlated with the negative peaks of U fl, and the profile of the parallel power flux density shows secondary maxima due to RMP which mimic those of J sat.


Nuclear Fusion | 2015

JET and COMPASS asymmetrical disruptions

S. Gerasimov; P. Abreu; M. Baruzzo; V. Drozdov; A. Dvornova; J. Havlicek; T. C. Hender; O. Hronova; U. Kruezi; Xiangyan Li; T. Markovic; R. Panek; G. Rubinacci; M. Tsalas; Salvatore Ventre; F. Villone; L. Zakharov


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2013

Progress in application of high temperature superconductor in tokamak magnets

M. Gryaznevich; V. Svoboda; J. Stöckel; A. Sykes; N. Sykes; D. Kingham; G. Hammond; P. Apte; T.N. Todd; S. Ball; S. Chappell; Z. Melhem; I. Ďuran; K. Kovarik; O. Grover; T. Markovic; M. Odstrcil; T. Odstrcil; A. Sindlery; G. Vondrasek; J. Kocman; Matthew Lilley; P. de Grouchy; H.-T. Kim


Nuclear Fusion | 2017

Losses of runaway electrons in MHD-active plasmas of the COMPASS tokamak

O. Ficker; J. Mlynar; Milos Vlainic; Jaroslav Cerovsky; J. Urban; P. Vondracek; V. Weinzettl; E. Macusova; J. Decker; M. Gospodarczyk; Paul L. Martin; E. Nardon; G. Papp; V. Plyusnin; C. Reux; F. Saint-Laurent; C. Sommariva; J. Cavalier; J. Havlicek; A. Havranek; O. Hronova; M. Imrisek; T. Markovic; J. Varju; R. Paprok; R. Panek; M. Hron


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2015

Quasicoherent modes on the COMPASS tokamak

A.V. Melnikov; T. Markovic; L.G. Eliseev; J. Adamek; M. Aftanas; P. Bilkova; P. Boehm; M. Gryaznevich; M. Imrisek; S.E. Lysenko; S Y Medvedev; R. Panek; M. Peterka; J. Seidl; E. Stefanikova; J. Stöckel; V. Weinzettl


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2015

Development of 3D ferromagnetic model of tokamak core with strong toroidal asymmetry

T. Markovic; Mikhail Gryaznevich; I. Ďuran; V. Svoboda; R. Panek


Journal of Instrumentation | 2017

Progress in diagnostics of the COMPASS tokamak

V. Weinzettl; J. Adamek; M. Berta; P. Bilkova; O. Bogar; P. Bohm; J. Cavalier; R. Dejarnac; M Dimitrova; O. Ficker; David Fridrich; O. Grover; P. Hacek; J. Havlicek; A. Havranek; J. Horacek; M. Hron; M. Imrisek; M. Komm; K. Kovarik; J. Krbec; T. Markovic; E. Matveeva; K. Mitosinkova; J. Mlynar; D. Naydenkova; R. Panek; R. Paprok; M. Peterka; A. Podolnik

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J. Havlicek

Charles University in Prague

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M. Imrisek

Charles University in Prague

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A. Havranek

Czech Technical University in Prague

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M. Komm

Charles University in Prague

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M. Peterka

Charles University in Prague

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P. Bilkova

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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P. Hacek

Charles University in Prague

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P. Vondracek

Charles University in Prague

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P. Bohm

Czech Technical University in Prague

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R. Dejarnac

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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