The effect of tangential drifts on neoclassical transport in stellarators close to omnigeneity
Ivan Calvo, Felix I. Parra, J. L. Velasco, J. Arturo Alonso

TL;DR
This paper investigates how small deviations from omnigeneity in stellarators affect neoclassical transport, especially in low-collisionality regimes, revealing the importance of tangential drifts and phase space layers for accurate transport modeling.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical analysis of tangential drift effects near omnigeneity, deriving a formula for ion energy flux and identifying new transport subregimes.
Findings
Transport scales with the square of deviation from omnigeneity.
Two phase space layers, $ u^{1/2}$ and superbanana-plateau, dominate transport.
Tangential electric field critically influences superbanana-plateau transport.
Abstract
In general, the orbit-averaged radial magnetic drift of trapped particles in stellarators is non-zero due to the three-dimensional nature of the magnetic field. Stellarators in which the orbit-averaged radial magnetic drift vanishes are called omnigeneous, and they exhibit neoclassical transport levels comparable to those of axisymmetric tokamaks. However, the effect of deviations from omnigeneity cannot be neglected in practice. For sufficiently low collision frequencies (below the values that define the regime), the components of the drifts tangential to the flux surface become relevant. This article focuses on the study of such collisionality regimes in stellarators close to omnigeneity when the gradient of the non-omnigeneous perturbation is small. First, it is proven that closeness to omnigeneity is required to preserve radial locality in the drift-kinetic equation for…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
