The first results of edge-localized mode (ELM) pacing using small spherical lithium granules injected mechanically into H-mode discharges are reported. Triggering of ELMs was accomplished using a simple rotating impeller to inject sub-millimetre size granules at speeds of a few tens of meters per second into the outer midplane of the EAST fusion device. During the injection phase, ELMs were triggered with near 100% efficiency and the amplitude of the induced ELMs as measured by Dα was clearly reduced compared to contemporaneous naturally occurring ELMs. In addition, a wide range of granule penetration depths was observed. Moreover, a substantial fraction of the injected granules appeared to penetrate up to 50% deeper than the 3 cm nominal EAST H-mode pedestal width. The observed granule penetration was, however, less deep than suggested by ablation modelling carried out after the experiment. The observation that ELMs can be triggered using the injection of something other than frozen hydrogenic pellets allows for the contemplation of lithium or beryllium-based ELM pace-making on future fusion devices. This change in triggering paradigm would allow for the decoupling of the ELM-triggering process from the plasma-fuelling process which is currently a limitation on the performance of hydrogen-based ELM mitigation by injected pellets.
Ultracold highly excited atoms in a magneto-optical trap ͑MOT͒ are strongly coupled by the dipole-dipole interaction. We have investigated the importance of many-body effects by controlling the dimensionality and density of the excited sample. We excited three different cylindrical volumes of atoms in the MOT to Rydberg states. At small radius, where the sample is nearly one-dimensional, many-body interactions are suppressed. At larger radii, the sample becomes three-dimensional and many-body effects are apparent.
Ultracold Rydberg atoms in a static electric field can exchange energy via the dipole-dipole interaction. The Stark effect shifts the energy levels of the atoms which tunes the energy exchange into resonance at specific values of the electric field (Förster resonances). We excite rubidium atoms to Rydberg states by focusing either a 480 nm beam from a tunable dye laser or a pair of diode lasers into a magneto-optical trap. The trap lies at the center of a configuration of electrodes. We scan the electric field by controlling the voltage on the electrodes while measuring the fraction of atoms that interact. Dipole-dipole interaction spectra are presented for initially excited rubidium nd states for n = 31 to 46 and for four different pairs of initially excited rubidium ns states. We also present the dipole-dipole interaction spectra for individual rubidium 32d (j, m j ) fine structure levels that have been selectively excited. The data are compared to calculated spectra.
We excite ultracold rubidium atoms in a magneto-optical trap to a coherent superposition of the three |m j | sublevels of the 37d 5/2 Rydberg state. After some delay, during which the relative phases of the superposition components can evolve, we apply an electric field pulse to ionize the Rydberg electron and send it to a detector. The electron traverses many avoided crossings in the Stark levels as it ionizes. The net effect of the transitions at these crossings is to mix the amplitudes of the initial superposition into the same final states at ionization. Similar to a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, the three initial superposition components have multiple paths by which they can arrive at ionization and, since the phases of those paths differ, we observe quantum beats as a function of the delay time between excitation and initiation of the ionization pulse. We present a fully quantum-mechanical calculation of the electron's path to ionization and the resulting interference pattern.
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