Stellarator
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A stellarator is a magnetic confinement device. The rotational transform is predominantly generated by external coils - as opposed to a tokamak, in which the poloidal field is generated by plasma currents. Hybrid concepts employ both external coils and self-generated (bootstrap) currents (e.g. NCSX).
Defunct stellarators
- ATF (Oak Ridge, TN, USA)
- CHS (Japan)
- NCSX (Princeton, NJ, USA) - cancelled before construction was completed
- W7-AS (Garching, Germany, 1988-2002)
Operational stellarators
- CAT/CTH (Auburn, USA)
- H-1NF (Canberra, Australia)
- Heliotron-J (Kyoto, Japan)
- HSX (Madison, WI, USA)
- LHD (Toki, Japan)
- TJ-II (Madrid, Spain)
- TJ-K (Stuttgart, Germany) - formerly TJ-IU
- UST-1 (Spain) - tabletop experiment
- WEGA (Greifswald, Germany)
Future stellarators
See also
- Stellarator reactor
- International Stellarator and Heliotron Workshop
- ARIES Project (conceptual design of a compact stellarator)
- Spherical Stellarator design study