Error field penetration and locking to the backward propagating wave
John M. Finn, Andrew J. Cole, Dylan P. Brennan

TL;DR
This paper investigates how error fields influence the locking of tearing modes in rotating plasmas, revealing that modes with finite real frequencies cause locking at velocities just above the mode phase velocity, with implications for plasma control.
Contribution
It demonstrates that modes with finite real frequencies lead to unique locking behavior, especially near the mode phase velocity, and explores the effects across different plasma regimes and external field applications.
Findings
Locking occurs at plasma velocities just above the mode phase velocity.
Real frequencies cause locking torque to peak near the mode phase velocity.
Similar locking behavior is observed in resistive-inertial and visco-resistive regimes.
Abstract
Resonant field amplification or error field penetration involves driving a weakly stable tearing perturbation in a rotating toroidal plasma. In this paper it is shown that the locking characteristics for modes with finite real frequencies are quite different from the conventional results. A calculation of the tearing mode amplitude assuming modes with frequencies in the plasma frame shows that it is maximized when the frequency of the stable backward propagating mode () in the lab frame is zero, i.e. when . Even more importantly, the locking torque is exactly zero at the mode phase velocity, with a pronounced peak at just higher rotation, leading to a locked state with plasma velocity just above the mode phase velocity in the lab frame. Real frequencies , leading to a symmetry, are known to…
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