Electron acceleration in a JET disruption simulation
Cristian Sommariva, Eric Nardon, Peter Beyer, Matthias Hoelzl, Guido, Huijsman (JET Contributors)

TL;DR
This study investigates how electrons can become runaway electrons during a simulated JET disruption by analyzing their dynamics with a complete electric field and collision effects, revealing multiple acceleration mechanisms.
Contribution
It extends previous work by incorporating the full electric field and a simplified collision model to better understand electron acceleration during disruptions.
Findings
Electrons at thermal energies can become runaway electrons during or after the thermal quench.
Complex MHD-induced electric fields contribute to initial electron acceleration.
Reformation of magnetic surfaces and the current quench electric field further accelerate electrons.
Abstract
Runaways are suprathermal electrons having sufficiently high energy to be continuously accelerated up to tens of MeV by a driving electric field [1]. Highly energetic runaway electron (RE) beams capable of damaging the tokamak first wall can be observed after a plasma disruption [2]. Therefore, it is of primary importance to fully understand their generation mechanisms in order to design mitigation systems able to guarantee safe tokamak operations. In a previous work, [3], a test particle tracker was introduced in the JOREK 3D non-linear MHD code and used for studying the electron confinement during a simulated JET-like disruption. It was found in [3] that relativistic electrons are not completely deconfined by the stochastic magnetic field taking place during the disruption thermal quench (TQ). This is due to the reformation of closed magnetic surfaces at the beginning of the current…
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