Saturation of Fishbone Instability by Self-Generated Zonal Flows in Tokamak Plasmas

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Abstract

Gyrokinetic simulations of the fishbone instability in DIII-D tokamak plasmas find that self-generated zonal flows can dominate the nonlinear saturation by preventing coherent structures from persisting or drifting in the energetic particle phase space when the mode frequency down-chirps. Results from the simulation with zonal flows agree quantitatively, for the first time, with experimental measurements of the fishbone saturation amplitude and energetic particle transport. Moreover, the fishbone-induced zonal flows are likely responsible for the formation of an internal transport barrier that was observed after fishbone bursts in this DIII-D experiment. Finally, gyrokinetic simulations of a related ITER baseline scenario show that the fishbone induces insignificant energetic particle redistribution and may enable high performance scenarios in ITER burning plasma experiments.

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Brochard, G., Liu, C., Wei, X., Heidbrink, W., Lin, Z., Gorelenkov, N., … Lütjens, H. (2024). Saturation of Fishbone Instability by Self-Generated Zonal Flows in Tokamak Plasmas. Physical Review Letters, 132(7). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.075101

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