318 research outputs found
Spatiotemporal evolution of runaway electrons from synchrotron images in Alcator C-Mod
In the Alcator C-Mod tokamak, relativistic runaway electron (RE) generation
can occur during the flattop current phase of low density, diverted plasma
discharges. Due to the high toroidal magnetic field (B = 5.4 T), RE synchrotron
radiation is measured by a wide-view camera in the visible wavelength range
(~400-900 nm). In this paper, a statistical analysis of over one thousand
camera images is performed to investigate the plasma conditions under which
synchrotron emission is observed in C-Mod. In addition, the spatiotemporal
evolution of REs during one particular discharge is explored in detail via a
thorough analysis of the distortion-corrected synchrotron images. To accurately
predict RE energies, the kinetic solver CODE [Landreman et al 2014 Comput.
Phys. Commun. 185 847-855] is used to evolve the electron momentum-space
distribution at six locations throughout the plasma: the magnetic axis and flux
surfaces q = 1, 4/3, 3/2, 2, and 3. These results, along with the
experimentally-measured magnetic topology and camera geometry, are input into
the synthetic diagnostic SOFT [Hoppe et al 2018 Nucl. Fusion 58 026032] to
simulate synchrotron emission and detection. Interesting spatial structure near
the surface q = 2 is found to coincide with the onset of a locked mode and
increased MHD activity. Furthermore, the RE density profile evolution is fit by
comparing experimental to synthetic images, providing important insight into RE
spatiotemporal dynamics
SOFT: A synthetic synchrotron diagnostic for runaway electrons
Improved understanding of the dynamics of runaway electrons can be obtained
by measurement and interpretation of their synchrotron radiation emission.
Models for synchrotron radiation emitted by relativistic electrons are well
established, but the question of how various geometric effects -- such as
magnetic field inhomogeneity and camera placement -- influence the synchrotron
measurements and their interpretation remains open. In this paper we address
this issue by simulating synchrotron images and spectra using the new synthetic
synchrotron diagnostic tool SOFT (Synchrotron-detecting Orbit Following
Toolkit). We identify the key parameters influencing the synchrotron radiation
spot and present scans in those parameters. Using a runaway electron
distribution function obtained by Fokker-Planck simulations for parameters from
an Alcator C-Mod discharge, we demonstrate that the corresponding synchrotron
image is well-reproduced by SOFT simulations, and we explain how it can be
understood in terms of the parameter scans. Geometric effects are shown to
significantly influence the synchrotron spectrum, and we show that inherent
inconsistencies in a simple emission model (i.e. not modeling detection) can
lead to incorrect interpretation of the images.Comment: 24 pages, 12 figure
Gold Nanoparticles for Plasmonic Biosensing: The Role of Metal Crystallinity and Nanoscale Roughness
Noble metal nanoparticles show specific optical properties due to the
excitation of localized surface plasmons that make them attractive candidates
for highly sensitive bionanosensors. The underlying physical principle is
either an analyte-induced modification of the dielectric properties of the
medium surrounding the nanoparticle or an increase of the excitation and
emission rates of an optically active analyte by the resonantly enhanced
plasmon field. Either way, besides the nanoparticle geometry the dielectric
properties of the metal and nanoscale surface roughness play an important role
for the sensing performance. As the underlying principles are however not yet
well understood, we aim here at an improved understanding by analyzing the
optical characteristics of lithographically fabricated nanoparticles with
different crystallinity and roughness parameters. We vary these parameters by
thermal annealing and apply a thin gold film as a model system to retrieve
modifications in the dielectric function. We investigate, on one hand,
extinction spectra that reflect the far-field properties of the plasmonic
excitation and, on the other hand, surface-enhanced Raman spectra that serve as
a near-field probe. Our results provide improved insight into localized surface
plasmons and their application in bionanosensing.Comment: 19 pages, including supplementary informatio
Isotope effects and Alfven eigenmode stability in JET H, D, T, DT, and He plasmas
While much about Alfven eigenmode (AE) stability has been explored in
previous and current tokamaks, open questions remain for future burning plasma
experiments, especially regarding exact stability threshold conditions and
related isotope effects; the latter, of course, requiring good knowledge of the
plasma ion composition. In the JET tokamak, eight in-vessel antennas actively
excite stable AEs, from which their frequencies, toroidal mode numbers, and net
damping rates are assessed. The effective ion mass can also be inferred using
measurements of the plasma density and magnetic geometry. Thousands of AE
stability measurements have been collected by the Alfven Eigenmode Active
Diagnostic in hundreds of JET plasmas during the recent Hydrogen, Deuterium,
Tritium, DT, and Helium-4 campaigns. In this novel AE stability database,
spanning all four main ion species, damping is observed to decrease with
increasing Hydrogenic mass, but increase for Helium, a trend consistent with
radiative damping as the dominant damping mechanism. These data are important
for confident predictions of AE stability in both non-nuclear (H/He) and
nuclear (D/T) operations in future devices. In particular, if radiative damping
plays a significant role in overall stability, some AEs could be more easily
destabilized in D/T plasmas than their H/He reference pulses, even before
considering fast ion and alpha particle drive. Active MHD spectroscopy is also
employed on select HD, HT, and DT plasmas to infer the effective ion mass,
thereby closing the loop on isotope analysis and demonstrating a complementary
method to typical diagnosis of the isotope ratio
On the minimum transport required to passively suppress runaway electrons in SPARC disruptions
In [V.A. Izzo et al 2022 Nucl. Fusion 62 096029], state-of-the-art modeling
of thermal and current quench (CQ) MHD coupled with a self-consistent evolution
of runaway electron (RE) generation and transport showed that a
non-axisymmetric (n = 1) in-vessel coil could passively prevent RE beam
formation during disruptions in SPARC, a compact high-field tokamak projected
to achieve a fusion gain Q > 2 in DT plasmas. However, such suppression
requires finite transport of REs within magnetic islands and re-healed flux
surfaces; conservatively assuming zero transport in these regions leads to an
upper bound of RE current ~1 MA compared to ~8.7 MA of pre-disruption plasma
current. Further investigation finds that core-localized electrons, within r/a
< 0.3 and with kinetic energies 0.2-15 MeV, contribute most to the RE plateau
formation. Yet only a relatively small amount of transport, i.e. a diffusion
coefficient ~18 , is needed in the core to fully mitigate these
REs. Properly accounting for (i) the CQ electric field's effect on RE transport
in islands and (ii) the contribution of significant RE currents to disruption
MHD may help achieve this
Husten, Atemnot und B-Symptome bei einer 40-jährigen Frau
Zusammenfassung: Der Morbus Castleman ist eine seltene polyklonale, lymphoproliferative Erkrankung, bei der Mediatoren von Entzündungsreaktionen, v.a. Interleukin-6, eine wichtige pathophysiologische Rolle spielen. Zur Behandlung dieser Krankheit ist keine Standardtherapie etabliert. Wir berichten über den Fall einer 40-jährigen HIV-negativen Patientin mit primär pulmonaler Manifestation eines HHV-8-negativen, plasmazellreichen multizentrischen Morbus Castleman. Verschiedene Therapieversuche mit Immunmodulatoren wurden durchgeführt, bevor eine Behandlung mit dem Interleukin-6-Rezeptor-Antikörper Tocilizumab begonnen wurde. Seit 5Jahren ist der klinische Verlauf unter fortgesetzter Tocilizumabgabe stabi
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