TY - JOUR
T1 - Structure and damping of toroidal drift waves (and their implications for anomalous transport)
AU - Taylor, J. B.
AU - Connor, J.
AU - Wilson, H. R.
PY - 1993
Y1 - 1993
N2 - The conventional theory of high-n toroidal drift waves, based on the ballooning representation, indicates that shear-damping is generally reduced in a torus compared to its plane-slab value. It therefore describes the most unstable class of toroidal drift waves. However, modes of this type occur only if the diamagnetic frequency omega *(r) has a maximum in r, and they affect only a small fraction, O(1/n1/2), of the plasma radius around this maximum. Consequently they may produce little anomalous transport. Within the ballooning description, there is another class of toroidal drift waves with very different properties to the conventional ones. The new modes have greater shear-damping (closer to that in a plane-slab) than the conventional ones and so have a higher instability threshold. However, they occur for any plasma profile and at all radii, and they have larger radial extent. Consequently they may produce much greater anomalous transport than the possibly benign conventional modes. This suggests a picture of anomalous transport in which the plasma profile is determined by marginal stability, but marginal to the new class of modes not to the conventional ones.
AB - The conventional theory of high-n toroidal drift waves, based on the ballooning representation, indicates that shear-damping is generally reduced in a torus compared to its plane-slab value. It therefore describes the most unstable class of toroidal drift waves. However, modes of this type occur only if the diamagnetic frequency omega *(r) has a maximum in r, and they affect only a small fraction, O(1/n1/2), of the plasma radius around this maximum. Consequently they may produce little anomalous transport. Within the ballooning description, there is another class of toroidal drift waves with very different properties to the conventional ones. The new modes have greater shear-damping (closer to that in a plane-slab) than the conventional ones and so have a higher instability threshold. However, they occur for any plasma profile and at all radii, and they have larger radial extent. Consequently they may produce much greater anomalous transport than the possibly benign conventional modes. This suggests a picture of anomalous transport in which the plasma profile is determined by marginal stability, but marginal to the new class of modes not to the conventional ones.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0012289791&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/0741-3335/35/8/012
DO - 10.1088/0741-3335/35/8/012
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0012289791
SN - 0741-3335
VL - 35
SP - 1063
EP - 1070
JO - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
JF - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
IS - 8
M1 - 012
ER -