Toroidal coordinates: Difference between revisions

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* ''R'' = ''R<sub>0</sub>'' + ''r'' cos ''&theta;'', and
* ''R'' = ''R<sub>0</sub>'' + ''r'' cos ''&theta;'', and
* ''Z'' = ''r'' sin ''&theta;''
* ''Z'' = ''r'' sin ''&theta;''
''R<sub>0</sub>'', corresponding to the torus axis, is called the ''major radius'' and ''r'' the ''minor radius''.
''R<sub>0</sub>'' corresponds to the torus axis and is called the ''major radius'', while ''r'' is called the ''minor radius'', and ''&theta;'' the ''poloidal angle''.
''&theta;'' is called the ''poloidal angle''.


== Toroidal ==
== Toroidal ==

Revision as of 14:36, 14 September 2009

A toroidal coordinate system

Coordinate systems used in toroidal systems:

Cartesian

(X, Y, Z) [1]

Cylindrical

(R, φ, Z), where [2]

  • R2 = X2 + Y2, and
  • tan φ = Y/X.

φ is called the toroidal angle (and not the cylindrical angle, at least not in the context of magnetic confinement).

Simple toroidal

(r, φ, θ), where

  • R = R0 + r cos θ, and
  • Z = r sin θ

R0 corresponds to the torus axis and is called the major radius, while r is called the minor radius, and θ the poloidal angle.

Toroidal

(ζ, η, φ), where [3] [4] [5]

where Rp is the pole of the coordinate system. Surfaces of constant ζ are tori with major radii R = Rp/tanh ζ and minor radii r = Rp/sinh ζ. At R = Rp, ζ = ∞, while at infinity and at R = 0, ζ = 0. The coordinate η is a poloidal angle and runs from 0 to 2π. This system is orthogonal.

Magnetic

All of the above coordinate systems are fixed. By contrast, magnetic coordinates adapt to the magnetic field, and therefore to the MHD equilibrium (also see Flux surface). Magnetic coordinates simplify the description of the magnetic field.

  • Hamada coordinates. [6][7] In these coordinates, both the field lines and current lines corresponding to the MHD equilibrium are straight.
  • Boozer coordinates. [8][9] In these coordinates, the field lines corresponding to the MHD equilibrium are straight.

These coordinate systems are related. [10]

References

  1. Wikipedia:Cartesian coordinate system
  2. Wikipedia:Cylindrical coordinate system
  3. Morse and Feshbach, Methods of theoretical physics, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1953 ISBN 007043316X
  4. Wikipedia:Toroidal coordinates
  5. F. Alladio, F. Chrisanti, Analysis of MHD equilibria by toroidal multipolar expansions, Nucl. Fusion 26 (1986) 1143
  6. S. Hamada, Nucl. Fusion 2 (1962) 23
  7. J.M. Greene and J.L Johnson, Stability Criterion for Arbitrary Hydromagnetic Equilibria, Phys. Fluids 5 (1962) 510
  8. A.H. Boozer, Plasma equilibrium with rational magnetic surfaces, Phys. Fluids 24 (1981) 1999
  9. A.H. Boozer, Establishment of magnetic coordinates for a given magnetic field, Phys. Fluids 25 (1982) 520
  10. K. Miyamoto, Controlled fusion and plasma physics, Vol. 21 of Series in plasma physics Plasma Physics, CRC Press (2007) ISBN 1584887095