Self-Organised Criticality: Difference between revisions

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Power degradation shows up in global transport scaling laws, and implies a sub-linear scaling of the plasma energy content with the injected power.
Power degradation shows up in global transport scaling laws, and implies a sub-linear scaling of the plasma energy content with the injected power.


The basic explanation for this phenomenon is self-regulation of the profiles by turbulence. The strong temperature and density gradients in fusion-grade plasmas provide free energy that may drive turbulence. The turbulence then enhances transport locally, leading to a local reduction of gradients and a consequential dampling of the turbulence amplitude. This feedback could be responsible for keeping the gradients below a critical value. Considered locally, this is a simple marginal state.  
The basic explanation for this phenomenon is self-regulation of the profiles by turbulence. The strong temperature and density gradients in fusion-grade plasmas provide free energy that may drive turbulence. The turbulence then enhances transport locally, leading to a local reduction of gradients and a consequential dampling of the turbulence amplitude. This feedback could be responsible for keeping the gradients below a critical value. Considered locally, the former is a description of a simple marginal state.  
But the interaction of such feedback mechanisms on various radial locations would lead to ''avalanche'' behaviour and a true (scale-free) self-organised state.
But the interaction of such feedback mechanisms on various radial locations would lead to ''avalanche'' behaviour and a true (scale-free) self-organised state.


Indeed, there is evidence for avalanching behaviour in numerical simulations, but experimental evidence is scarce.
Indeed, there is direct evidence for avalanching behaviour in numerical simulations, but experimental evidence is scarce.
<ref>[http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.84.1192 P.A. Politzer, Phys. Rev. Lett. '''84''', 1192 (2000)]</ref>
<ref>[http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.84.1192 P.A. Politzer, Phys. Rev. Lett. '''84''', 1192 (2000)]</ref>
However, some indirect evidence exists. Typically, such evidence involves the detection of long-range correlations in fluctuations.
<ref>[http://link.aip.org/link/?PHPAEN/6/1885/1 B.A. Carreras et al., Phys. Plasmas '''6''', 1885 (1999)]</ref>


==References==
==References==
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