TJ-II:Spectroscopy: Difference between revisions

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A vacuum ultraviolet spectrometer has been operated on TJ-II since 1999. It is an f/10.4 1 m normal-incidence vacuum spectrometer equipped with interchangeable 1200 and 3600 lines mm<sup>-1</sup> gratings and a back-illuminated CCD camera with 400 x 1340 pixels (20 x 20 &mu;m<sup>2</sup>). The instrument covers the wavelength range from ~20 to ~300 nm. It has been used to perform spectral surveys (identify and follow the evolution of plasma impurities), to obtain impurity ion temperatures, and to perform specialized studies (e.g. study fast oxygen ions present in plasmas during the neutral beam injection heating phase.
A vacuum ultraviolet spectrometer has been operated on TJ-II since 1999. It is an f/10.4 1 m normal-incidence vacuum spectrometer equipped with interchangeable 1200 and 3600 lines mm<sup>-1</sup> gratings and a back-illuminated CCD camera with 400 x 1340 pixels (20 x 20 &mu;m<sup>2</sup>). The instrument covers the wavelength range from ~20 to ~300 nm. It has been used to perform spectral surveys (identify and follow the evolution of plasma impurities), to obtain impurity ion temperatures, and to perform specialized studies (e.g. study fast oxygen ions present in plasmas during the neutral beam injection heating phase.
<ref>K. J. McCarthy, B. Zurro, R. Balbín, A. Baciero, J. Herranz, and I. Pastor, Europhys. Lett. 63 (2003) 49</ref>
<ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1209/epl/i2003-00476-x K.J. McCarthy, B. Zurro, R. Balbín, A. Baciero, J. Herranz, and I. Pastor, Europhys. Lett. '''63''' (2003) 49]</ref>
<ref>K. J. McCarthy, M. A. Ochando, F. Medina, B. Zurro, C. Hidalgo, M. A. Pedrosa, I. Pastor, J. Herranz and A. Baciero, Fusion Sci. & Tech. 46, 129-134 (2004)</ref>
<ref>[http://www.new.ans.org/store/j_548 K.J. McCarthy, M. A. Ochando, F. Medina, B. Zurro, C. Hidalgo, M. A. Pedrosa, I. Pastor, J. Herranz and A. Baciero, Fusion Sci. & Tech. '''46''', 129-134 (2004)]</ref>
<ref>K. J. McCarthy, V. Tribaldos, J. Arévalo, and M. Liniers, J. Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics 43 (2010) 144020</ref>
<ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-4075/43/14/144020 K.J. McCarthy, V. Tribaldos, J. Arévalo, and M. Liniers, J. Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics '''43''' (2010) 144020]</ref>


The TJ-II is also equipped with a multi-channel spectroscopic and compact diagnostic neutral beam injector system optimized for performing Charge Exchange Recombination Spectroscopy. It permits localized measurements of the impurity ion temperature as well as poloidal and toroidal velocity at 12 positions across the plasma minor radius. For this, the system is set-up to observe the 529.06 nm line emission of C<sup>+5</sup>.  
The TJ-II is also equipped with a multi-channel spectroscopic and compact [[TJ-II:Diagnostic neutral beam|diagnostic neutral beam injector system]] optimized for performing [[TJ-II:Charge exchange spectroscopy|Charge Exchange Recombination Spectroscopy]]. It permits localized measurements of the impurity ion temperature as well as poloidal and toroidal velocity at 12 positions across the plasma minor radius. For this, the system is set-up to observe the 529.06 nm line emission of C<sup>+5</sup>.  
<ref>J.M. Carmona, K.J. McCarthy, V. Tribaldos, R. Balbín, Fusion Sci. Tech. 54, 962-969 (2008)</ref>
<ref>J.M. Carmona, K.J. McCarthy, V. Tribaldos, R. Balbín, Fusion Sci. Tech. 54, 962-969 (2008)</ref>
<ref>J. M. Carmona, K. J. McCarthy, R. Balbín, S. Petrov, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 77, 10F107 (2006)</ref>


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

Revision as of 12:29, 20 September 2010

Multichannel system

Observation geometry of the nine-channel high-resolution spectroscopic diagnostic system

TJ-II disposes of a nine-channel, high-resolution, spectroscopic diagnostic system. This system is currently being used to measure impurity ion temperature and poloidal rotation using passive emission spectroscopy. The principal features of the diagnostic include independent focusing of its channels, high sensitivity for performing Doppler measurements in plasmas, as well as a flexible and fast in-house-developed software program for performing integrated data reduction and analysis. [1] [2]. This experimental system has also been used to measure proton rotation using spectral line emission from excited fast neutrals created from inner core plasma protons via charge exchange transfer reactions. [3]

Toroidal rotation measurement

The VUV spectrometer on TJ-II

A method for measuring absolutely calibrated toroidal rotation velocities consists of simultaneously recording the emission lines from the plasma and from a calibration lamp by means of a double fiber-fiber guide. [4] The system has been mounted at φ = -9.45° (sector D8) and φ = 170.56° (sector B8).

Other techniques

A vacuum ultraviolet spectrometer has been operated on TJ-II since 1999. It is an f/10.4 1 m normal-incidence vacuum spectrometer equipped with interchangeable 1200 and 3600 lines mm-1 gratings and a back-illuminated CCD camera with 400 x 1340 pixels (20 x 20 μm2). The instrument covers the wavelength range from ~20 to ~300 nm. It has been used to perform spectral surveys (identify and follow the evolution of plasma impurities), to obtain impurity ion temperatures, and to perform specialized studies (e.g. study fast oxygen ions present in plasmas during the neutral beam injection heating phase. [5] [6] [7]

The TJ-II is also equipped with a multi-channel spectroscopic and compact diagnostic neutral beam injector system optimized for performing Charge Exchange Recombination Spectroscopy. It permits localized measurements of the impurity ion temperature as well as poloidal and toroidal velocity at 12 positions across the plasma minor radius. For this, the system is set-up to observe the 529.06 nm line emission of C+5.

References