Toroidal effect on runaway vortex and avalanche growth rate
2019
The momentum-space dynamics of runaway electrons in a slab geometry, in terms of both the geometry and topological transition of the runaway vortex when synchrotron radiative damping is taken into account, has recently been shown to play a crucial role in runaway mitigation and avoidance. In a tokamak geometry, magnetic trapping arises from parallel motion along the magnetic field that scales as 1/R in strength with R the major radius. Since the transit time for a runaway electron moving along the field is of order 10−8 s while the collisional time is of ∼0.01 s in ITER-like plasmas, a bounce-averaged formulation can drastically reduce computational cost. Here, the Los Alamos Plasma Simulation – Relativistic Fokker-Planck Solver code's implementation of a bounce-averaged relativistic Fokker-Planck model, along with the essential physics of synchrotron radiation damping and knock-on collisions, is described. It is found that the magnetic trapping can reduce the volume of the runaway vortex as the momentum-space fluxes are strongly modified inside the trapped-region. As a result, the avalanche growth rate is reduced at off-axis locations. In addition to benchmarking with previous calculations that did not take into account radiation damping, we also clarify how synchrotron radiation damping modifies the avalanche growth rate in a tokamak.The momentum-space dynamics of runaway electrons in a slab geometry, in terms of both the geometry and topological transition of the runaway vortex when synchrotron radiative damping is taken into account, has recently been shown to play a crucial role in runaway mitigation and avoidance. In a tokamak geometry, magnetic trapping arises from parallel motion along the magnetic field that scales as 1/R in strength with R the major radius. Since the transit time for a runaway electron moving along the field is of order 10−8 s while the collisional time is of ∼0.01 s in ITER-like plasmas, a bounce-averaged formulation can drastically reduce computational cost. Here, the Los Alamos Plasma Simulation – Relativistic Fokker-Planck Solver code's implementation of a bounce-averaged relativistic Fokker-Planck model, along with the essential physics of synchrotron radiation damping and knock-on collisions, is described. It is found that the magnetic trapping can reduce the volume of the runaway vortex as the momentum-...
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