Main objective of the LATE (Low Aspect ratio Torus Experiment) device is to demonstrate formation of ST plasmas by electron cyclotron heating (ECH) alone without center solenoid. By injecting a 2.45 GHz microwave pulse up to 30 kW for 4 seconds, a plasma current of 1.2 kA is spontaneously initiated under a weak steady vertical field of B v = 12 Gauss, and then ramped up with slow ramp-up of B v for the equilibrium of the plasma loop and finally reaches 6.3 kA at B v = 70 Gauss. This currents amount 10 percents of the coil currents of 60 kAT for the toroidal field. Magnetic measurements show that an ST equilibrium, having the last closed flux surface with an aspect ratio of R 0 /a 20.4 cm/14.5 cm 1.4, an elongation of κ = 1.5 and q edge = 37, has been produced and maintained for 0.5 s at the final stage of discharge. The plasma center locates near the second harmonic EC resonance layer and the line averaged electron density significantly exceeds the plasma cutoff density, suggesting that the second harmonic EC heating by the mode-converted electron Bernstein waves (EBW) support the plasma. Spontaneous formation of ST equilibria under steady B v fields, where plasma current increases rapidly in the time scale of a few milliseconds, is also effective and a plasma current of 6.8 kA is spontaneously generated and maintained at B v = 85 Gauss by a 5 GHz microwave pulse (130 kW, 60 ms).
Results are presented of the first Lower Hybrid Current Drive (LHCD) experiments in JT-60. 2 MA of RF driven current is successfully produced for the first time in a reactor grade tokamak. The magnetic divertor works quite well in eliminating the impurities released by the current carrying fast electrons which have allowed the generation of the reactor relevant RF current in a very low density plasma. The efficiency which is defined asr?cD = n e RlRF/PLHO u19 m " 3 A-W" 1 ), reaches values of 0.8 to 1.7. NBI heating enhances the current drive efficiency by a factor of 1.5, and LHCD improves the confinement time of high power NBI heated plasma. The key to confinement improvement is found to be the active control of the current profile by LHCD.
Double differential thick target neutron yields from 5and 9 MeV deuteron incidence on aluminum and SUS304st ainless steel were measured at the Kyushu University Tandem Accelerator Laboratory. An aluminum, and a SUS 304 foil which were thick enough for a deuteron to stop in the foils were placed at the center of a vacuum chamber. AnNE213 liquid organic scintillator was employed to detect neutrons emitted from targets. To consider the contribution of scattered neutrons from the floor, we also measured neutron yields with an iron shadow bar located in front of the scintillator. Because incident deuteron beam was not pulsed and the Time-of-Flight method was not applied, the energy spectrum was derived from unfolding the light output spectrum using the FORIST code. The re sponse function of the detector was calculated with the SCINFUL-QMD code. The experimental results were compared with the calculation data of the TALYS and PHITS code, and it turned out that the calculation data does not reproduce the experimental ones satisfactorily.
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