The first equilibrium reconstruction of EAST current-density profile based on internal Faraday rotation measurements provided by the POlarimeter-INTerferometer (POINT) diagnostic is demonstrated using the EFIT equilibrium reconstruction code. EFIT incorporates 11 simultaneous line-integrated density and Faraday effect measurements from POINT to self-consistently reconstruct the equilibrium toroidal current density profile using a Faraday rotation reconstruction algorithm. It is shown that the POINT measurements can be applied to improve the accuracy of core plasma current density and q profile on EAST. Comparisons of magnetic surfaces and the q profile reconstructed using external magnetic data against those using magnetic and POINT data are presented. Equilibrium reconstructions using POINT data are found to be consistent with sawtooth phenomena. The sensitivity of equilibrium reconstruction to POINT measurements indicates Faraday rotation provides important constraints for determining the current profile.
A toroidal Alfvén eigenmode (TAE) excited by barely trapped energetic electrons during the application of a static magnetic perturbations (MPs) is observed for the first time in tokamak ohmic heating plasmas. This TAE appears when the current of a static n = 2 MPs exceeds a threshold value, at which a forced n = 2 magnetic reconnection happens. Here, n is the toroidal mode number. This TAE is located near the plasma edge, which agrees with the calculation of the TAE gap. It propagates in the ion diamagnetic direction and has a dominant toroidal mode number n = 2. The frequency of the TAE is consistent with the precessional frequency of the barely trapped energetic electrons with energy around 150 keV. An increase of the hard x-ray emission intensity in this energy range is observed just after the n = 2 magnetic reconnection. The energetic electrons may be accelerated by the magnetic islands formed after reconnection. The TAE is stabilized after a reduction in the contents of energetic electrons. This observation suggests that the application of static MPs may provide us with a novel method to actively control Alfvén eigenmodes in fusion plasmas.
A simulation of a disruption in the experimental advanced superconducting tokamak (EAST) is carried out with the CarMa0NL code and the results are successfully compared with the experimental data. The fundamental role of three-dimensional (3D) features of conducting structures surrounding the plasma is demonstrated and is fully accounted for in simulations. The results demonstrate that the currents measured by Rogowski coils placed around the supports of in-vessel plasma facing components (PFCs) are largely due to eddy currents induced by the plasma motion and current decay, with a relatively small contribution coming from the currents directly injected from the plasma into the structures (halo currents).
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