Low-aspect-ratio tokamaks offer both the economic advantage of smaller size and a number of physics advantages which are not available at conventional aspect ratio. The Small Tight Aspect Ratio Tokamak (START) [Fusion Technology 1990, edited by B. E. Keen, M. Huguet, and R. Hemsworth (North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1991), Vol. 1, p. 353] was conceived as a first substantial test of tokamak plasma behavior at low aspect ratio. It has achieved plasma currents up to 200 kA, peak densities of ∼2X 1020 m-3 and central electron temperatures of ∼500 eV at an aspect ratio of 1.3-1.5. Central beta values of ∼13% have been measured and the volume-averaged beta 〈β〉 can approach the Troyon limit. Plasmas are naturally elongated (κ≲2.0) and are vertically stable without feedback control. Major disruptions have not been observed at low aspect ratios (A≤2.0). © 1993 American Institute of Physics.
CITATION STYLE
Colchin, R. J., Carolan, P. G., Duck, R., Edlington, T., Erents, S. K., Ferreira, J., … Wilson, H. R. (1993). The small tight aspect ratio tokamak experiment. Physics of Fluids B, 5(7), 2481–2484. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.860732
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