Divertor: Difference between revisions

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The term 'divertor' can either refer to the magnetic field structure (beyond the X-point and in contact with material surfaces) or to the material structure intersecting the 'outgoing legs' of the magnetic separatrix surface.
The term 'divertor' can refer to:
* the magnetic field structure beyond the X-point and in contact with material surfaces, or
* the material structure intersecting the 'outgoing legs' of the magnetic separatrix surface.
 
The divertor region between the 'outgoing legs' - the region between the material divertor and the X-point, up to the separatrix - is known as the private flux region (PFR).


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 18:59, 15 February 2010

Sketch of divertor types: single and double null tokamak divertors (toroidally symmetric), and island divertor. From [1].

A divertor configuration is a magnetic field configuration in which the toroidally confined (plasma) region is separated from the outside world by a separatrix - as opposed to a limiter configuration in which the plasma's Last Closed Magnetic Surface is determined by the intersection of field lines by a material object.

One can distinguish 'tokamak divertors' (characterised by toroidal symmetry and one or two X-points or 'nulls') and 'island divertors' (for stellarators). [1]

The term 'divertor' can refer to:

  • the magnetic field structure beyond the X-point and in contact with material surfaces, or
  • the material structure intersecting the 'outgoing legs' of the magnetic separatrix surface.

The divertor region between the 'outgoing legs' - the region between the material divertor and the X-point, up to the separatrix - is known as the private flux region (PFR).

See also

References