Stellarator: Difference between revisions

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A stellarator is a [[Magnetic confinement|magnetic confinement]] device. The [[Rotational transform|rotational transform]] is predominantly generated by external coils - as opposed to a [[Tokamak|tokamak]], in which the poloidal field is generated by plasma currents. Hybrid concepts (including the concepts known as quasi-[[axisymmetry]] and quasi-omnigeneity) employ both external coils and self-generated ([[Bootstrap current|bootstrap]]) currents (e.g. NCSX).
A stellarator is a [[Magnetic confinement|magnetic confinement]] device. The [[Rotational transform|rotational transform]] is predominantly generated by external coils - as opposed to a [[Tokamak|tokamak]], in which the poloidal field is generated by plasma currents. Hybrid concepts (including the concepts known as quasi-[[axisymmetry]] and quasi-[[omnigeneity]]) employ both external coils and self-generated ([[Bootstrap current|bootstrap]]) currents (e.g. NCSX).


[[File:NCSX_plasmaVessel.jpg|200px|thumb|right|NCSX plasma vessel.]]
[[File:NCSX_plasmaVessel.jpg|200px|thumb|right|NCSX plasma vessel.]]

Revision as of 10:05, 5 September 2013

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 (including the concepts known as quasi-axisymmetry and quasi-omnigeneity) employ both external coils and self-generated (bootstrap) currents (e.g. NCSX).

NCSX plasma vessel.

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

Future stellarators

  • W7-X (under construction, Greifswald, Germany)
  • QPS (in design phase, TN, USA)

See also

References

  • M. Wakatani, Stellarator and Heliotron devices, Oxford University Press, New York and Oxford (1998) ISBN 0-19-507831-4