The neutral-beam induced D α emission spectrum contains a wealth of information such as deuterium ion temperature, toroidal rotation, density, beam emission intensity, beam neutral density, and local magnetic field strength magnitude |B| from the Stark-split beam emission spectrum, and fast-ion D α emission (FIDA) proportional to the beam-injected fast ion density. A comprehensive spectral fitting routine which accounts for all photoemission processes is employed for the spectral analysis. Interpretation of the measurements to determine physically relevant plasma parameters is assisted by the use of an optimized viewing geometry and forward modeling of the emission spectra using a Monte-Carlo 3D simulation code.
A new thermal helium beam diagnostic has been implemented as plasma edge diagnostic at the ASDEX Upgrade (AUG) tokamak. The helium beam is built to measure the electron density n e and temperature T e simultaneously with high spatial and temporal resolution in order to investigate steady-state as well as fast transport processes in the plasma edge region. For the thermal helium beam emission line ratio spectroscopy, neutral helium is locally injected into the plasma by a piezo valve. This enabled the measurement of the line resolved emission intensities of seven He I lines for different plasma scenarios in AUG. The different line ratios can be used together with a collisional-radiative model (CRM) to reconstruct the underlying electron temperature and density. Ratios from the same spin species are used for the electron density reconstruction, whereas spin mixed ratios are sensitive to electron temperature changes. The different line ratios as well as different CRMs are tested for their suitability for diagnostic applications. Furthermore their consistency in calculating identical parameters is validated and the resulting profiles are compared to other available diagnostics at AUG.
Electron temperature Te and density ne have been measured in the divertor island of Wendelstein 7-X by means of a new thermal He-beam system utilizing line-ratio spectroscopy. This system is equipped with a poloidal arrangement of five gas valves that allows to infer 2D plasma profiles Te(R,Z) and ne(R,Z) across the magnetic island forming the island divertor. A local maximum in Te(R,Z) was measured along the flux surfaces located between the island center and the outer separatrix. In the island center, characterized by closed field lines, a clear local minimum in Te was measured, indicating that no direct heat deposition occurs in this region and that the perpendicular heat flux from the core plasma into this domain is small. Increasing the island size leads to a reduction of the connection length in the scrape-off layer and to a shift of the island center towards the divertor target. In this scenario, the Te(R,Z) are reduced in the entire island domain. Density profiles are found flat across the divertor island for both island size scenarios. These findings are supported by similar observations made with a reciprocating probe plunging through the same scrape-off layer island at the mid-plane of W7-X representing the upstream position in this 3D divertor geometry.
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