Simulation and analysis of a high-k electron scale turbulence diagnostic for MAST-U
David C. Speirs, Juan Ruiz-Ruiz, Maurizio Giacomin, Valerian H., Hall-Chen, Alan D. R. Phelps, Roddy Vann, Peter G. Huggard, Hui Wang, Anthony, Field, Kevin Ronald

TL;DR
This paper presents a synthetic diagnostic for measuring electron scale turbulence in MAST-U tokamak, combining beam-tracing and gyrokinetic simulations to predict measurement capabilities and localizations, enabling advanced turbulence studies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mm-wave collective scattering diagnostic optimized for core and edge turbulence measurement in MAST-U, supported by a comprehensive modeling framework.
Findings
Maximum measurable wavenumber in the core is ~0.6 k_perp rho_e.
Localisation lengths range from 0.4 m to 0.08 m.
ETG turbulence peaks are within the measurable spectral range.
Abstract
Plasma turbulence on disparate spatial and temporal scales plays a key role in defining the level of confinement achievable in tokamaks, with the development of reduced numerical models for cross-scale turbulence effects informed by experimental measurements an essential step. MAST-U is a well-equipped facility having instruments to measure ion and electron scale turbulence at the plasma edge. However, measurement of core electron scale turbulence is challenging, especially in H mode. Using a novel synthetic diagnostic approach, we present simulated measurement specifications of a proposed mm-wave based collective scattering instrument optimised for measuring both normal and binormal electron scale turbulence in the core and edge of MAST-U. A powerful modelling framework has been developed that combines beam-tracing techniques with gyrokinetic simulations to predict the sensitivity,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic confinement fusion research · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
