Pedestal: Difference between revisions

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In the context of magnetic confinement fusion, the term ''pedestal'' refers to a relatively narrow edge plasma region with significantly enhanced profile gradients, identified with an edge transport barrier, characteristic of the [[H-mode]].
In the context of magnetic confinement fusion, the term ''pedestal'' refers to a relatively narrow edge plasma region with significantly enhanced profile gradients, identified with an edge transport barrier, characteristic of the [[H-mode]].
<ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0029-5515/29/11/010 ASDEX Team, ''The H-Mode of ASDEX'', Nucl. Fusion '''29''' (1989) 1959]</ref>
When transiting from the L-mode to the H-mode, the appearance of the pedestal often leaves the profile gradients in the core region intact (due to [[Profile consistency|profile consistency]]) whereas the edge gradients increase sharply. Thus, it appears as if the core profiles are merely shifted upward (as if put upon a pedestal), hence the terminology.
When transiting from the L-mode to the H-mode, the appearance of the pedestal often leaves the profile gradients in the core region intact (due to [[Profile consistency|profile consistency]]) whereas the edge gradients increase sharply. Thus, it appears as if the core profiles are merely shifted upward (as if put upon a pedestal), hence the terminology.



Revision as of 12:21, 9 July 2011

In the context of magnetic confinement fusion, the term pedestal refers to a relatively narrow edge plasma region with significantly enhanced profile gradients, identified with an edge transport barrier, characteristic of the H-mode. [1] When transiting from the L-mode to the H-mode, the appearance of the pedestal often leaves the profile gradients in the core region intact (due to profile consistency) whereas the edge gradients increase sharply. Thus, it appears as if the core profiles are merely shifted upward (as if put upon a pedestal), hence the terminology.

Physically, the edge region is complex as it contains the transition (separatrix) from the confined plasma with closed field lines to the scrape-off layer (SOL) with open field lines; transport fluxes are large there; and the interaction with the wall (atomic and molecular physics) is important. The understanding of this region is still imperfect. Many attempts have been made to derive scaling laws of phenomenological pedestal parameters (such as its width and height), with limited success. [2]

References