4.8 Article

First Direct Observation of Runaway-Electron-Driven Whistler Waves in Tokamaks

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 120, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.155002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. DOE Frontier Science Program [DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-FG02-07ER54917, DE-SC0016268, DE-AC05-060R23100, DE-FG03-94ER54271, DE-AC02-09CH11466, DE-AC05-00OR22725]
  2. UT-Battelle, LLC [DE-AC05-00OR22725]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy
  4. Department of Energy

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DIII-D experiments at low density (n(e) similar to 10(19) m(-3)) have directly measured whistler waves in the 100-200 MHz range excited by multi-MeV runaway electrons. Whistler activity is correlated with runaway intensity (hard x-ray emission level), occurs in novel discrete frequency bands, and exhibits nonlinear limit-cycle-like behavior. The measured frequencies scale with the magnetic field strength and electron density as expected from the whistler dispersion relation. The modes are stabilized with increasing magnetic field, which is consistent with wave-particle resonance mechanisms. The mode amplitudes show intermittent time variations correlated with changes in the electron cyclotron emission that follow predator-prey cycles. These can be interpreted as wave-induced pitch angle scattering of moderate energy runaways. The tokamak runaway-whistler mechanisms have parallels to whistler phenomena in ionospheric plasmas. The observations also open new directions for the modeling and active control of runaway electrons in tokamaks.

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