IntroductionRotation plays an important role in the transition from L-to H-mode [1][2][3][4].Poloidal rotation in the edge plasma region has been closely associated with the L-H transition [5-7], and toroidal momentum confinement is well correlated with energy confinement [8-11]. While there have been several diagnostic systems designed to measure impurity toroidal rotation in tokamak plasmas [8-33], most of the observations have been made in plasmas with an external momentum source, usually provided by neutral beams. Toroidal impurity rotation in ohmic plasmas (no net momentum input) is consistent with neoclassical predictions [24,33,34]; in ohmic L-mode discharges, impurities rotate in the direction opposite to the plasma current, so in general the assumption that the majority ions and impurities (which are most often measured) rotate in the same way might be questionable [34]. In neutral beam heated plasmas, which have substantial direct momentum input, the toroidal momentum confinement time is much shorter than the neoclassical predic-
Experiment DescriptionThe observations presented here were obtained from the Alcator C- Mod [35] tokamak, a compact (major radius R = 67 cm, typical minor radius of 22 cm, and
Observations of Toroidal Rotation and ScalingsShown in Fig clockwise, and the solid spectrum is blue-shifted, the argon is rotating clockwise, in same direction as the plasma current during the RF pulse. This is in the direction opposite to the rotation of impurities in ohmic L-mode plasmas [8,24,33,34]. The magnitude of the shift is -. 5 mA, which yields a toroidal rotation velocity of (.5 mA/3731.1 mA) x c = 4.0 x 106 cm/s, in the co-current direction. Since the major radius of Alcator C-Mod is 67 cm, this corresponds to an angular rotation speed of 60 kRad/sec.The toroidal rotation may also be determined from the heliumlike argon forbid-4 den line. Shown in Fig.3a and 3b are spectra recorded from a spectrometer viewing the plasma mid-plane, at an angle of 60 from a major radius, in a slight counter clockwise view. The spectra of Fig.3a were obtained from a 1.1 MA discharge (clockwise current), and there is a blue-shift of .13±.01 ml during the H-mode phase (solid spectrum), when the plasma stored energy increased by .12 MJ. This corresponds to a toroidal rotation velocity increase of (.13 mA/3994.3 mX)/sin(6*)x c = 1.0 x 107 cm/s (150 kRad/sec), in the co-current direction. The spectra of Fig.3b were obtained with the same view from a 1.0 MA discharge with the plasma current in the counter clockwise direction, and there is a red-shift of .07t.01 mA during the 2.7 MW ICRF pulse, indicating that the argon is rotating in the counter clockwise direction, again co-current. This L-mode discharge had a stored energy increase of 45 kJ, when the magnitude of the toroidal rotation velocity increased by 5.3 x 106 cm/s, and still opposite to the rotation direction in ohmic discharges.The phasing of the RF antennas for this case was the same as in Fig.3a. Shown in Fig.3c are spectra recorded from a 6* clockwise ...