Magnetic curvature: Difference between revisions

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(good curvature) and unstable otherwise (bad curvature). Here, ''p'' is the pressure.
(good curvature) and unstable otherwise (bad curvature). Here, ''p'' is the pressure.
<ref>[http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/RevModPhys.76.1071 A.H. Boozer, ''Physics of magnetized plasmas'', Rev. Mod. Phys. '''76''' (2004) 1071]</ref>
<ref>[http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/RevModPhys.76.1071 A.H. Boozer, ''Physics of magnetized plasmas'', Rev. Mod. Phys. '''76''' (2004) 1071]</ref>
== Normal curvature ==
:<math>\kappa_N = \kappa \cdot \frac{\vec \nabla \psi}{|\vec \nabla \psi|}</math>
Here, &psi; is a [[Flux surface|flux surface]] label (such as the poloidal flux).
== Geodesic curvature ==
:<math>\kappa_G = \kappa \cdot \left (\frac{\vec \nabla \psi}{|\vec \nabla \psi|} \times \frac{\vec B}{|\vec B|}\right )</math>


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 22:15, 11 October 2009

The magnetic curvature is defined by

where

is a unit vector along the magnetic field. κ points towards the local centre of curvature of B, and its magnitude is equal to the inverse radius of curvature.

A plasma is stable against curvature-driven instabilities (e.g., ballooning modes) when

(good curvature) and unstable otherwise (bad curvature). Here, p is the pressure. [1]

Normal curvature

Here, ψ is a flux surface label (such as the poloidal flux).

Geodesic curvature

References