Study of turbulent transport in magnetized plasmas with flow using symplectic maps

Turbulent transport in a magnetized plasma of the kind found in tokamaks is modeled by a 2D wave spectrum that allows reduction to a symplectic map. The properties of particle transport when chaos sets in are analyzed in various circumstances including finite Larmor radius (FLR) effects and a backgr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inChaos (Woodbury, N.Y.) Vol. 33; no. 5
Main Authors Torres, Jorge, Martinell, Julio J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.05.2023
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Summary:Turbulent transport in a magnetized plasma of the kind found in tokamaks is modeled by a 2D wave spectrum that allows reduction to a symplectic map. The properties of particle transport when chaos sets in are analyzed in various circumstances including finite Larmor radius (FLR) effects and a background plasma flow. For large wave amplitudes, regular particle orbits become chaotic, which represents a type of Lagrangian turbulence. When chaos becomes global, it leads to the loss of particle confinement. Poloidal flows tend to decrease the chaos in some regions, and they can give rise to the formation of transport barriers. FLR effects not only reduce chaos but also give rise to non-local behavior. Thus, when the particles have a thermal distribution of Larmor radii, a non-Gaussian particle distribution function in space is obtained. However, the transport preserves its diffusive scaling when there is no flow. Previous results about the dependence of the diffusion coefficient with amplitude are re-derived analytically and numerically taking into account FLR effects. In the presence of general poloidal flows, the transport has to be described by a two-step map. They modify the nature of transport in the direction of the flow from diffusive to ballistic to super-ballistic, depending on the type of flow. The transverse transport, in turn, shows suppression of the oscillations with wave amplitude that are present in the absence of flow. When the plasma flow varies linearly with radius, the transport can be studied with a similar single-step map, and the transverse diffusion coefficient is reduced while parallel transport can become super-ballistic. For non-monotonic flows, there are accelerating modes that can produce ballistic-like particles while the bulk of the particles behaves diffusively.
ISSN:1054-1500
1089-7682
DOI:10.1063/5.0144037