An analytic theory of turbulence in reduced resistive magnetohydrodynamics is developed and applied to the major disruption in tokamaks. The renormalized equations for a long-wavelength tearing instability are derived. The theory predicts two principal nonlinear effects: an anomalous flux diffusivity due to turbulent fluid convection in Ohm's law and a vorticity damping term due to turbulent magnetic stresses in the equation of motion. In the final phase of the disruption, when fine-scale fluid turbulence has been generated, detailed considerations show that anomalous diffusivity has the dominant effect at long wavelengths. For a low-m tearing mode, the solution of the renormalized equations during the turbulent phase yields a growth rate analogous to the classical case but increased by turbulent resistivity: γ∼(Σ k′ k′θ2|φ k′|2)3/8(Δ′)1/2. This analytical prediction is in good accord with computational results. © 1984 American Institute of Physics.
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Diamond, P. H., Hazeltine, R. D., An, Z. G., Carreras, B. A., & Hicks, H. R. (1984). Theory of anomalous tearing mode growth and the major tokamak disruption. Physics of Fluids, 27(6), 1449–1462. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.864766