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Observation of rapid frequency chirping instabilities driven by runaway electrons in a tokamak...

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Nuclear Fusion
Publication Date
Page Number
124004
Volume
59
Issue
12

In this work, we report the first observation of chirping instabilities driven by runaway electrons (REs) in a tokamak. The instabilities are accessed during the post-disruption RE beam stage in a low density background plasma (n e < 10 19 m -3) on DIII-D. The chirping instabilities are observed when a decelerating loop voltage is applied to the RE beam. The frequency chirping is detected in two distinct frequency bands: 0.1–10 MHz and 30–80 MHz. The mode frequency increases linearly when the toroidal magnetic field sensed by the RE beam increases. The frequency chirps by 0.3–2.4 MHz on a timescale of 1 ms. Modification of the RE distribution function is directly measured during the chirping in the low-frequency band consistent with the hole–clump model for frequency chirping. The low-frequency instabilities also correlate with an increase of intermittent RE loss from the plasma. Lastly, these observations provide a novel experimental platform for fundamental studies of nonlinear chirping. They also support continued investigation of opportunities to utilize kinetic instabilities for RE mitigation in a tokamak reactor.