— - !979 Sherwood (Deet Ing — A§Pect$ Ef Centyotted Ch€Ymeahc!Ea.Y Q)Ovat #Ecem#$ #Ean$G!¥Ania

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

— - !979 Sherwood (Deet Ing — A§Pect$ Ef Centyotted Ch€Ymeahc!Ea.Y Q)Ovat #Ecem#$ #Ean$G!¥Ania — - !979 Sherwood (Deet ing — A§pect$ ef Centyotted Ch€ymeaHc!ea.y Q)ovat #ecem#$ #ean$g!¥ania A p r -i! 18 ^ §0, 1 9 7 9 ',-''-j'...':,r !''r B Y ' . ' j, L.ABOr^':*OH Y PROCEEDINGS OF THE SHERWOOD MEETING THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF CONTROLLED THERMONUCLEAR FUSION April 18 - 20, 1979 Pocono Manor, Mt. Pocono, Pennsylvania Sponsored by Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey 08544 EXECUTIVE PROGRAM LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS COMMITTEE COMMITTEE COMMITTEE H. Weitzner, Ch. A. H. Boozer, Ch. J. L. Johnson, Ch 1. Bernstein D. Barnes A. H. Boozer C. K. Chu H. L. Berk R. Donald J. M. Dawson W. Grossmann A. H. Glasser G. Guest J. Hogan P. H. Rutherford A. Kaufman N. Krall K. E. Weimer H. R. Lewis R. Lovelace M. Weissenburger D. Nelson R. E. Price L. D. Pearlstein A. Ware D. Ross P. H. Rutherford W. L. Sadowski A. Simon (,P General Information All sessions will be held at the Pocono Manor. The morning oral sessions will be in the Terrace Ballroom; the afternoon (or evening) poster sessions will be in the Plymouth Meeting Center. Coffee and other refreshments will be available during both the oral and poster sessions. There will be two consecutive poster sessions on Wednesday afternoon and Thursday evening and one on Friday afternoon. Thursday afternoon is free. A Cocktail Hour will be held in the Horizon Lounge Wednesday at 5:30. Two drinks are included in the registration fee. The Registration and Travel desks are in the Fountain Room. If you need assistance in planning transportation out, check with Travel early. There were 255 papers submitted of which 21 were chosen for oral presentation. Provisions have been made for these authors to present the details of their work in a subsequent poster presentation. SCHEDULE Tuesday, p.m. 5:00 - 7:00 Registration & Complementary Punch 7:00 - 8:00 Dinner 8:00 - 11:00 Registration 9:00 - 11:30 Snack for late arrivals Wednesday 7:30 - 9:00 Breakfast 8:30 Welcome 8:45 Oral Session 1A Wednesday 10:25 - 10:45 Coffee 10:45 Oral Session 1A 10:00 Coffee Hour 12:00 - 1:00 Lunch for Guests of 1:30 - 3:15 Poster Session IB Conference 3:00 - 4:00 Refreshments (Horizon Lounge) 3:30 - 5:15 Poster Session 1C 5:30 - Cocktails 6:30 - 8:00 Dinner Thursday 7:30 - 9:00 Breakfast 8:45 Oral Session 2A 10:25 - 10:45 Coffee 10:45 Oral Session 2A 12:00 - 1:00 Lunch FREE AFTERNOON 6:30 - 8:00 Dinner 7:30 - 9:00 Poster Session 2B 8:45 - 9:30 Refreshments 9:15 - 10:45 Poster Session 2C, Friday 7:30 - 9:00 Breakfast 8:45 Oral Session 3A 10:25 - 10:45 Coffee 10:45 Oral Session 3A 12:00 - 1:00 Lunch 1:30 - 3:00 Poster Session 3B 1979 SHERWOOD MEETING THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF CONTROLLED THERMONUCLEAR RESEARCH April 18-20, 1979 — Pocono Manor — Mt. Pocono, Pa. TUESDAY APRIL 17 5:00-7:00 REGISTRATION AND COMPLIMENTARY RUM PUNCH Fountain Room 7:00-8:00 DINNER Main Dining Room 8:00- 11:00 REGISTRATION Fountain Room 9:00-11:30 SANDWICHES FOR LATE ARRIVALS Sam's Place WEDNESDAY APRIL 18 7:30-9:00 BREAKFAST Main Dining Room 8:15-12:15 REGISTRATION (Registration and Travel Desk open during aLL sessions) 8:30 Welcome M. B. GottLieB Announcements J. L. Johnson 8:45 ORAL SESSION 1A Terrace BaLLroom D. Ross and H.R. Lewis Chairmen 1A1. CaLcuLation of the Kolmogorov Entropy for Motion ALong a Stochastic Magnetic FieLd A. B. Rechester, M. N. RosenBLuth, and R. B. White. 1A2. Finite Beta sub e Universal. Mode TurBulence and ALcator ScaLing. K. MoLvig. 1A3. Energy Cascade in Drift-Tearing Modes. J. F. Drake and C. S. Liu. 1A4. RenormaLized Induced Scattering and Nonlinear Damping of CoLLisionLess Drift Waves J. A. Krommes. 10:25-10:45 COFFEE BREAK 1A5. Theoretical. Studies for the ELmo Bumpy Torus (EBT) Device. D. A. Spong, D. B. BatcheLor, C. L. Hedrick, and E. F. Jaeger. 1A6. Enhancement of Tandem Mirror PLug Potentials by Thermal. ParticLe Pumpout. D. E. BaLdwin and B. G. Logan. 1A7. Effects of Toroidicity on the NonLinear Interaction of Tearing Modes. H. R. Hie s, B. Carreras, and S. J. Lynch. 12:00-1:00 LUNCH (Dining Room doors cLose promptLy at 1:00) 1:30-3:00 POSTER SESSION 1B (ALL Poster Sessions are in the Plymouth Meeting Center) ORAL Papers 1A1-1A4 wiLL be given in Patrick Henry C ManorHaLL Auditorium 181. Charge Exchange as an Impurity RecomBination Mechanism. R. A. HuLse, D. E. Post, and D. R. MikkeLsen. 182. RadiaL Scaling in the QuasiLinear ModeL of Drift Cyclotron Loss Cone (DCLC). L. D. Pearlstein, J. J Stewart, T. D. RognLien, andH. L. Berk. 183. ToroidaL Effects on the AccessiBility of Lower Hybrid Slaves. P. 1. BonoLi, E. Ott, and J. M. Wersinger. 184. A FuLLy Two-DimensionaL Transport ModeL. M. H. Emery, N. Winsor, and J. Boris. 185. Lower Hybrid ELectron Landau Damping and Current Drive in the Presence of an Applied DC ELectric Field and Transport Losses. K. D. Marx, R. W. Harvey, V. S. Chan, and J. M. RawLs. 186. Current Profile StaBilization of D-Shaped Tokamaks to Ideal MHD Modes. L. C. Bernard, D. DoBrott, F J. HeLton, and R. W. Moore. 187. A Compact Form of the Integral Equation for Waves in an Inhomogeneous PLasma. S. P. AuerBach. 188. NonLocaL HyBrid-kinetic StaBility Analysis of the Mirror Drift-Cone InstaBility. H. S. Uhm, R. C. Davidson, and R. E. Aamodt. 1B9. StaBility Properties of a FieLd-Reversed Ion Layer in a Background PLasma. R. C. Davidson and H. S. Uhm. 1B10. Thermal Equilibrium Properties of an Intense Ion Beam With Rotational and AxiaL Motion. J. Chen and R C. Davidson. 1B11. Geometric Optics in Inhomogeneous Isotropic and Anisotropic PLasmas and on Their Boundaries. L. FriedLand and I. B. Bernstein. 1B12. Higher Order Chapman-Enskog Theory for Electrons: Application to Temperature Gradient-Driven Modes. A. B. Hassam. 1B13. Dissipative Drift Modes Driven By The ELectron Temperature Gradient In A Sheared Magnetic FieLd. C. L Chang, J. F. Drake,N. T. GLadd, andC. S. Liu. 1B14. Microtearing Modes and Anomalous Transport in Tokamaks. N. T. GLadd, J. F. Drake, C. S. Liu, and C. L. Chang. 1815. OBservation of Transport in Tokamaks of ArBitrary Shape and Approximate NumericaL Description. M. SoLer. 1S16. EquiliBrium NumericaL Study of the Formation of the PLasma in Tormac. A. Aydemir and C. K. Chu. 1817. Two-Way Diffusion Equations and Diffuse Reflection of Lower-HyBrid Waves. N. J. Fisch. 1B18. EBT NeocLassicaL Ion Transport with Non-MaxweLLian f and Higher Order PoLoidaL Expansions. R. B. Campbell, R. J. Kashuba, and T. Kammash. 1819. Argonne Beam Propagation and Target Experimental Program for Proposed Heavy Ion Facility. G. R. MageLssen. Jefferson Room 1B20. A Finite Element Solution of a Reduced Fokker-PLanck Equation. 1. Bernstein, A. Weiser, S. Eisenstat, and M. Schultz. 1B21. ALpha-ParticLe Heating in Tokamaks. D. R. MikkeLsen and D. E. Post. 1822. Tearing Modes in a Braided Magnetic FieLd. P. K. Kaw, E. J. VaLeo, and P. H. Rutherford. 1823. CoupLing of Lower HyBrid to Acoustic Modes. E. J. VaLeo and L. Chen. 1B24. A PossiBLe Strange Attractor in MHD Convective InstaBiLities. Y. M. Treve and 0. P. ManLey. 1B25. Cubic TurBuLence. D. R. NichoLson and D. F. DuBois. 1B26. The SLpw Ion CycLotron Wave in Tokamaks. C. Chu. 1B27. Guiding Center PLasmas in the Presence of GravitationaL (DeL B) Drifts. G. Joyce, C. S. Liu, and D. Montgomery. 1B28. FieLd Reversed PLasma Rotation and Transport. L. C. Steinhauer. 1B29. NonLinear Saturation of BaLLooning Modes for Tokamaks. F. Bauer, 0. Betancourt, and P. GaraBedian. 1B30. Free Boundary EquiLiBria with MuLtipoLe Expansion of ExternaL FieLd in NoncircuLar Tokamaks. 0. Okada S. DaLhed, J. DeLucia, and M. OkaBayashi. 1B31. Spectrum and Eigenfunctions for a Fietd Equation With Stochastic Ray Trajectories. S. W. McDonald and A. N. Kaufman, 1B32. MagnetohydrodynamicaL Interchange InstaBiLity in Low-Beta PLasmas in Sheared Systems. S. Ydshikawa and R. B. White. Monroe Room -1B33. Current-Driven Drift-Wave InstaBiLity of a Finite-Beta PLasma in a Sheared-Magnetic FieLd. T. Tange, C. Ueno, H. Irie, T. WatanaBe, S. Inoue, K. Itoh, K. Nishikawa, and S. Yoshikawa. 1B34. Two-DimensionaL Eigenmode Analysis of the Trapped-Ion InstaBiLity. R. Marchand, G. RewoLdt, and W. M. Tang. 1B35. AnaLysis of PLT Discharges with High NeutraL Injection. A. L. Sutton, M. Cotsaftis, and H. H. KLein. 1B36- Conducting ShetL StaBiLization of FCT EquitiBria. L. A. CharLton, R. A. Dory, Y-K. M. Peng, D. J. StrickLer, S. J. Lynch, and D. K. Lee. Patrick Henry A 1B37. Optimization of Transition CoiL Design in Tandem Mirror Systems from the Point of View of Interchange StaBility. T. B. Kaiser. 1B38. Cross-FieLd Electron Transport Due to Thermal Electromagnetic Fluctuations. A. T. Lin, J. M. Dawson, and H. Okuda. 1B39. Magnetohydrodynamic InstaBiLities in a High Shear HeLicaL System. M. Wakatani, T. Yoshioka, K. Hanatani, 0. Motojima, A. Iiyoshi, and K. Uo. 1840. NonLinear Kink InstaBiLities in Force-Free FieLds. H. C. Lui. 1841. AnomaLous Diffusion and PLasma Leakage Through Open FieLd Lines in FieLd ReversaL Configurations. S. Hamasaki. 1B42. EquiLiBrium and StaBiLity of Tokamaks with Tensor Pressure. A. Cooper, D. B. NeLson, G. Bateman, and T. Kammash. 1B43. Impurity Control by NeutraL Beam Injection. W. M. Stacey and D.J. Sigmar. 1B44. StaBiLity of NeutraL Beam Heated EquiLiBria to BaLLooning Modes. R. W. Moore, R. L. MiLLer, and R. E. WaLtz. Patrick Henry B 1845. Resonant Second Harmonic Generation of Upper HyBrid Radiation in a PLasma.
Recommended publications
  • The Alfven Wave Zoo
    Open Access Library Journal 2020, Volume 7, e6378 ISSN Online: 2333-9721 ISSN Print: 2333-9705 The Alfven Wave Zoo A. S. de Assis1, C. E. da Silva2, V. J. O. Werneck de Carvalho3 1Fluminense Federal University, Niteroi, RJ, Brasil 2State University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil 3Departamento de Geopfísica, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Niterói, RJ, Brasil How to cite this paper: de Assis, A.S., da Abstract Silva, C.E. and Werneck de Carvalho, V.J.O. (2020) The Alfven Wave Zoo. Open Access It has been shown that a variety of names are assigned to the original MHD Library Journal, 7: e6378. Alfven wave derived originally by Hannes Alfven in the 40s (Nature 150, https://doi.org/10.4236/oalib.1106378 405-406 (1942)), and those names are used due to the different magnetic Received: April 30, 2020 geometries where the target plasma could be confined, that is, in laboratory, Accepted: June 27, 2020 in fusion, in space, and in astrophysics, where one could use as working geo- Published: June 30, 2020 metry systems such as cartesian, cylindrical, toroidal, dipolar, and even more complex ones. We also show that different names with no new dramatic new Copyright © 2020 by author(s) and Open Access Library Inc. physics induce misleading information on what is new and relevant and what This work is licensed under the Creative is old related to the considered wave mode. We also show that changing the Commons Attribution International confining geometry and the background plasma kinetic properties, the Alfven License (CC BY 4.0).
    [Show full text]
  • The Quest for a Fusion Energy Reactor This Page Intentionally Left Blank the Quest for a Fusion Energy Reactor
    The Quest for a Fusion Energy Reactor This page intentionally left blank The Quest for a Fusion Energy Reactor An Insider’s Account of the INTOR Workshop Weston M. Stacey 1 2010 3 Oxford University Press, Inc., publishes works that further Oxford University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education. Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With offi ces in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Copyright © 2010 by Oxford University Press, Inc. Published by Oxford University Press, Inc. 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 www.oup.com Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Stacey, Weston M. The quest for a fusion energy reactor : an insider’s account of the INTOR Workshop / Weston M. Stacey. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-19-973384-2 1. Fusion reactors—Design and construction. 2. Engineering test reactors—Design and construction. 3. Tokamaks. 4. Fusion reactors— Research—International coorporation. 5. International Tokamak Reactor Workshop I. Title. TK9204.S62 2010 621.48’4—dc22 2009022620 987654321 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper To all of those who contributed to the INTOR Workshop.
    [Show full text]
  • The Dipole Fusion Confinement Concept: a White Paper for the Fusion Community
    The Dipole Fusion Confinement Concept: A White Paper for the Fusion Community D. Garnier and M. Mauel Department of Applied Physics, Columbia University New York, NY 10027 L. Bromberg and J. Kesner MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center Cambridge, MA 02139 J. M. Dawson Department of Physics, UCLA Los Angeles, CA 90024 April 1998 1 Introduction The dipole magnetic field is the simplest and most common magnetic field configuration in the universe. It is the magnetic far-field of a single, circular current loop, and it rep- resents the dominate structure of the middle magnetospheres of magnetized planets and neutron stars. The use of a dipole magnetic field generated by a levitated ring to confine a hot plasma for fusion power generation was first considered by Akira Hasegawa after participating in the Voyager 2 encounter with Uranus [1]. Hasegawa recognized that the inward diffusion and adiabatic heating that accompanied strong magnetic and electric fluctuations in planetary magnetospheres represented a fundamental property of strongly magnetized plasmas not yet observed in laboratory fusion experiments. For example, it is well-known that global fluctuations excited in laboratory fusion plasmas result in rapid plasma and energy loss. In contrast, large-scale fluctuations induced by sudden compressions of the geomagnetic cavity (due to enhancements in solar wind pressure) or by unsteady convections occurring during magnetic substorms energize and populate the energetic electrons trapped in the Earth's magnetosphere [2]. The fluctuations induce in- ward particle diffusion from the magnetospheric boundary even when the central plasma 1 density greatly exceeds the density at the edge. Hasegawa postulated that if a hot plasma having pressure profiles similar to those observed in nature could be confined by a labo- ratory dipole magnetic field, this plasma might also be immune to anomalous (outward) transport of plasma energy and particles.
    [Show full text]
  • 2005 Annual Report American Physical Society
    1 2005 Annual Report American Physical Society APS 20052 APS OFFICERS 2006 APS OFFICERS PRESIDENT: PRESIDENT: Marvin L. Cohen John J. Hopfield University of California, Berkeley Princeton University PRESIDENT ELECT: PRESIDENT ELECT: John N. Bahcall Leo P. Kadanoff Institue for Advanced Study, Princeton University of Chicago VICE PRESIDENT: VICE PRESIDENT: John J. Hopfield Arthur Bienenstock Princeton University Stanford University PAST PRESIDENT: PAST PRESIDENT: Helen R. Quinn Marvin L. Cohen Stanford University, (SLAC) University of California, Berkeley EXECUTIVE OFFICER: EXECUTIVE OFFICER: Judy R. Franz Judy R. Franz University of Alabama, Huntsville University of Alabama, Huntsville TREASURER: TREASURER: Thomas McIlrath Thomas McIlrath University of Maryland (Emeritus) University of Maryland (Emeritus) EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Martin Blume Martin Blume Brookhaven National Laboratory (Emeritus) Brookhaven National Laboratory (Emeritus) PHOTO CREDITS: Cover (l-r): 1Diffraction patterns of a GaN quantum dot particle—UCLA; Spring-8/Riken, Japan; Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lab, SLAC & UC Davis, Phys. Rev. Lett. 95 085503 (2005) 2TESLA 9-cell 1.3 GHz SRF cavities from ACCEL Corp. in Germany for ILC. (Courtesy Fermilab Visual Media Service 3G0 detector studying strange quarks in the proton—Jefferson Lab 4Sections of a resistive magnet (Florida-Bitter magnet) from NHMFL at Talahassee LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT APS IN 2005 3 2005 was a very special year for the physics community and the American Physical Society. Declared the World Year of Physics by the United Nations, the year provided a unique opportunity for the international physics community to reach out to the general public while celebrating the centennial of Einstein’s “miraculous year.” The year started with an international Launching Conference in Paris, France that brought together more than 500 students from around the world to interact with leading physicists.
    [Show full text]
  • 25Th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference LIST of PARTICIPANTS
    25th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference St Petersburg, Russian Federation 13 – 18 October 2014 LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (6 October 2014) IAEA-CN-221 Designating Member Name of Participant Address State / Organization AFGHANISTAN 1 Khalid, Fazal Rahman Afghan Atomic Energy High Commisison Near Silo-e-Markaz PO Box 1050 Central Post Office KABUL AFGHANISTAN EMail: [email protected] ALGERIA 2 Sid, Abdelaziz University of Batna Department of Matter Sciences Faculty of Sciences Road of Khelloufi Mohammed El Hadi no. 1 BATNA 05000 DZ ALGERIA EMail: [email protected]; [email protected] ANGOLA 3 Lemos, Pedro Carlos Domingos Atomic Energy Regulatory Authority Rua Ho-Chi-Min LUANDA ANGOLA EMail: [email protected] 4 Vieira Lopez Junior, Felix Ministry of Energy and Water Affairs Rua Congego Manuel das Neves 234 LUANDA ANGOLA EMail: [email protected] 5 Vilinga, Job Feca Martins Ministry of Energy and Water Affairs Rua Conego Manuel das Neves 234 LUANDA ANGOLA EMail: [email protected] ARGENTINA 6 Farengo, Ricardo Comision Nacional de Energia Atomica Bustillo 9500 8400 BARILOCHE Rio Negro ARGENTINA Fax: +542944445299 EMail: [email protected] 06-Oct-14 Page 2 of 118 Designating Member Name of Participant Address State / Organization AUSTRALIA 7 Blackwell, Boyd Australian National University Research School of Physics and Engineering Australian National University ACTION 0200 AUSTRALIA EMail: [email protected] 8 Hole, Matthew Australian National University Mills Road 0200 CANBERRA AUSTRALIA EMail: [email protected]
    [Show full text]
  • Research Report
    INSTITUTE OF PIJiSMA PHYSICS NAGOYA UNIVERSITY DAISEN SUMMER SCHOOL (Laser Fusion Workshop) IPPJ-235 November 1975 RESEARCH REPORT NAGOYA, JAPAN DAISEN SUMMER SCHOOL (Laser Fusion Workshop) IPPJ-235 November 1975 Further communication about this report is to be sent co the Research Information Center, Institute of Plasma Physics, Nagoya University, Nagoya, JAPAN. Contents Preface List of Participants 1. Two-Step Laser-Driven Fusion Reactor Y. Yabe, K. Nishihara and J. Mizui (6) 2. Filamentation and Decay of Laser Light in Plasmas K. Nishihara, Y. Mima, J. Mizui, M. Inutake, T. Tange, Y. Kiwamoto and M. Kako (13) 3. Magnetic Field Generation Due to Resonant Absorption K. Nishihara, Y. Ohsawa, Y. Mima and T. Tange ..... (19) 4. A Design of. Steady State Fusion Burner A. Hasegawa, T. Hatori, K. Itoh, T. Ikuta, Y. Kodama and K. Nozaki (27) 5. Magnetically Focused Fast Ion in Laser Target Plasma K. Itoh and S. Inoue (44) 1 - Preface During the last month of my visit to Japan e.s a NSF exchange scientist, I decided to spend a week to serve to organize a workshop to attack problems in the general area of laser-plasma interaction and laser fusion. In response to my proposal, Prof. C. Yamanaka, T. Taniuti and K. Takayama kindly made arrangement for the financial support and the meeting was materialized in July 16 to 22nd., 1975- The arrangement of the meeting including the site selection and other business matters were kindly made by Drs. K. Mima and T. Yamanaka. The meeting started first by hoaring current problems from the experimentalists.
    [Show full text]
  • 11 European Fusion Theory Conference
    SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME COMMITTEE F. Zonca(chair) ENEA, Italy D. Borba IST, Portugal M. Lisak VR, Sweden S. Cappello CNR, Italy V. Naulin Risø, Denmark F. Castejon CIEMAT, Spain M. Ottaviani CEA, France D. Van Eester TEC, Belgium O. Sauter CRPP, Switzerland th S. Günter IPP, Germany M. Tokar TEC, Germany 11 European J. Heikkinen Tekes, Finland M. Vlad INFLPR, Romania P. Helander UKAEA, UK Fusion Theory Conference Organised by: Association EURATOM-CEA and Université de Provence IMPORTANT DATES 30 April 2005 Deadline for submission of abstracts 15 June 2005 Information for contributors 30 June 2005 Deadline for registration and hotel reservation 26 -28 September 2005 11th EFTC LOCAL ORGANISING COMMITTEE M. Ottaviani (chairman) P. Beyer H. Capes A. Corso-Leclercq T. Hutter (scientific secretary) G. Huysmans (webmaster) R. Stamm Mailing Address: Mrs. A. Corso-Leclercq 11th EFTC Conference Secretariat 26 -28 September 2005 DRFC/SCCP/G2IC, bât. 513, Conference Centre CEA Cadarache, Aix-en-Provence, France 13108 St-Paul-lez-Durance, France Website : http://www-fusion-magnetique.cea.fr/eftc11/index.html E-mail : [email protected] Announcement and Call for Abstracts Photos by J-C Carbone SUBJECT MATTER A confirmation of receipt will be sent by e-mail within a week. Submissions printed on paper should be made only if severe problems The 11th European Fusion Theory Conference will be held in Aix-en- arise with electronic submission. The Scientific Committee will select the Provence in the south of France from the 26th to the 28th of September contributions on the basis of the submitted abstracts. Authors will be 2005.
    [Show full text]
  • Frontiers in Plasma Physics Research: a Fifty-Year Perspective from 1958 to 2008-Ronald C
    • At the Forefront of Plasma Physics Publishing for 50 Years - with the launch of Physics of Fluids in 1958, AlP has been publishing ar In« the finest research in plasma physics. By the early 1980s it had St t 5 become apparent that with the total number of plasma physics­ related articles published in the journal- afigure then approaching 5,000 - asecond editor would be needed to oversee contributions in this field. And indeed in 1982 Fred L. Ribe and Andreas Acrivos were tapped to replace the retiring Fran~ois Frenkiel, Physics of Fluids' founding editor. Dr. Ribe assumed the role of editor for the plasma physics component of the journal and Dr. Acrivos took on the fluid Editor Ronald C. Davidson dynamics papers. This was the beginning of an evolution that would see Physics of Fluids Resident Associate Editor split into Physics of Fluids A and B in 1989, and culminate in the launch of Physics of Stewart J. Zweben Plasmas in 1994. Assistant Editor Sandra L. Schmidt Today, Physics of Plasmas continues to deliver forefront research of the very Assistant to the Editor highest quality, with a breadth of coverage no other international journal can match. Pick Laura F. Wright up any issue and you'll discover authoritative coverage in areas including solar flares, thin Board of Associate Editors, 2008 film growth, magnetically and inertially confined plasmas, and so many more. Roderick W. Boswell, Australian National University Now, to commemorate the publication of some of the most authoritative and Jack W. Connor, Culham Laboratory Michael P. Desjarlais, Sandia National groundbreaking papers in plasma physics over the past 50 years, AlP has put together Laboratory this booklet listing many of these noteworthy articles.
    [Show full text]
  • APS Launches New Web Site for the Public
    December 2000 NEWS Volume 9, No. 11 A Publication of The American Physical Society http://www.aps.org/apsnews Check It Out and Tell APS Launches New Web Site for the Public Your Friends This month APS is launching feature a “Picture of the Week,” il- APS members are urged to PhysicsCentral.com, a brand new lustrating natural phenomena and visit PhysicsCentral.com, and web site targeted at the general pub- the physicists who investigate to offer their comments and lic. “The site is designed to bring the them. suggestions. This can be done importance and excitement of phys- There is a news section that pre- either by using the “Contact ics to everyone,” said Jessica Clark, sents breaking news as well as Us” button on the site, or by APS outreach specialist who is in features prepared by the Inside Sci- emailing Jessica Clark directly charge of its overall management. ence News Service of AIP. Those at [email protected]. “While the site highlights the re- who want to know how things They are also urged to search and activities of many APS work can consult a weekly “Dear spread the word by inviting members, PhysicsCentral is intended Lou” column contributed by Uni- relatives, friends, students to reach beyond the physics com- versity of Virginia physicist Louis and anyone else with access munity. We need our members to A. Bloomfield, and they can ask to the web and curiosity encourage non-physicists to visit the Lou their own questions as well. A about the physical world to site as well,” Clark adds.
    [Show full text]
  • Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion Research During Half a Century Bo Lehnert
    SE0100262 TRITA-A Report ISSN 1102-2051 VETENSKAP OCH ISRN KTH/ALF/--01/4--SE IONST KTH Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion Research During Half a Century Bo Lehnert Research and Training programme on CONTROLLED THERMONUCLEAR FUSION AND PLASMA PHYSICS (Association EURATOM/NFR) FUSION PLASMA PHYSICS ALFV N LABORATORY ROYAL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY SE-100 44 STOCKHOLM SWEDEN PLEASE BE AWARE THAT ALL OF THE MISSING PAGES IN THIS DOCUMENT WERE ORIGINALLY BLANK TRITA-ALF-2001-04 ISRN KTH/ALF/--01/4--SE Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion Research During Half a Century Bo Lehnert VETENSKAP OCH KONST Stockholm, June 2001 The Alfven Laboratory Division of Fusion Plasma Physics Royal Institute of Technology SE-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden (Association EURATOM/NFR) Printed by Alfven Laboratory Fusion Plasma Physics Division Royal Institute of Technology SE-100 44 Stockholm PLASMA PHYSICS AND CONTROLLED FUSION RESEARCH DURING HALF A CENTURY Bo Lehnert Alfven Laboratory, Royal Institute of Technology S-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden ABSTRACT A review is given on the historical development of research on plasma physics and controlled fusion. The potentialities are outlined for fusion of light atomic nuclei, with respect to the available energy resources and the environmental properties. Various approaches in the research on controlled fusion are further described, as well as the present state of investigation and future perspectives, being based on the use of a hot plasma in a fusion reactor. Special reference is given to the part of this work which has been conducted in Sweden, merely to identify its place within the general historical development. Considerable progress has been made in fusion research during the last decades.
    [Show full text]
  • Cv Hsxie.Pdf
    Hua-sheng XIE (谢华生) November 4, 2020 Born: Nov. 14, 1987, Hengyang, Hunan, China Mail: a). 河北廊坊开发区华祥路新源东道新奥科技园智能大厦,065001; b). Huaxiang Road, Economic and Technological Development Zone, LangFang Hebei, China 065001 E-mail: xiehuasheng[at]enn.cn, huashengxie@{gmail.com, 126.com} Tel: +86-177-3368-5518 Web: http://hsxie.me 2018.02- Chief Scientist of Fusion Simulation ENN Fusion Technology R&D Center (ENN-FTRC), Deputy Director ENN Science and Technology Development Co.,Ltd. [新奥科技发展有限公司(新奥 能源研究院)] Education • Postdoc 2015.10 - 2018.02, School of Physics, Peking University • Ph.D. Plasma Physics, 2015, Zhejiang University Thesis: Numerical Simulations of Micro-turbulence in Tokamak Edge (Advisor: Yong XIAO) • B.S. Physics, 2010, Zhejiang University Thesis: Study of ES1D Beam-Plasma Interactions (Advisor: Prof. Liu CHEN) Research interests (up to now) • Compact fusion. • Fundamental plasma theories (especially, space plasma, astrophysics) • Algorithms for numerical solutions or simulations of linear and nonlinear plasma problems 1 Hua-sheng XIE · 2 · • Tokamak physics (Alfvén waves/eigenmodes, ballooning mode, edge, ...) • Dipole field (space and laboratory, see gkd) Publications 1. H. S. Xie, Generalized Plasma Dispersion Function: One-solve-all Treatment, Visualizations, and Application to Landau Damping, Physics of Plasmas, 2013, 20, 092125. [13a] 2. H. S. Xie, Constant Residual Electrostatic Electron Plasma Mode in Vlasov- Ampere System, Physics of Plasmas, 2013, 20, 112108. [13b] 3. H. S. Xie, PDRF: A General Dispersion Relation Solver for Magnetized Multi- fluid Plasma, Computer Physics Communications, 2014, 185, 670šC675. [14a] 4. W. Chen, Z. Qiu, X. T. Ding, H. S. Xie, L. M. Yu, X. Q. Ji, J. X. Li, Y.
    [Show full text]
  • Fusion Science and Technology VOLUME 72 · NUMBER 3 · OCTOBER 2017
    Fusion Science and Technology VOLUME 72 · NUMBER 3 · OCTOBER 2017 Selected papers from the Twenty-Second Topical Meeting on the Technology of Fusion Energy—Part 1 August 21–25, 2016, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Contents vii Preface Adam Cohen, Arnie Kellman, Susana Reyes TECHNICAL PAPERS 199 Current Status of Large Helical Device and Its Prospect for Deuterium Experiment M. Osakabe, Y. Takeiri, T. Morisaki, G. Motojima, K. Ogawa, M. Isobe, M. Tanaka, S. Murakami, A. Shimizu, K. Nagaoka, H. Takahashi, K. Nagasaki, H. Takahashi, T. Fujita, Y. Oya, M. Sakamoto, Y. Ueda, T. Akiyama, H. Kasahara, S Sakakibara, R. Sakamoto, M. Tokitani, H. Yamada, M. Yokoyama, Y. Yoshimura, LHD Experiment Group 211 The Challenges of Plasma Material Interactions in Nuclear Fusion Devices and Potential Solutions J. Rapp 222 Progress in the U.S./Japan PHENIX Project for the Technological Assessment of Plasma Facing Components for DEMO Reactors Yutai Katoh, Daniel Clark, Yoshio Ueda, Yuji Hatano, Minami Yoda, Adrian S. Sabau, Takehiko Yokomine, Lauren M. Garrison, J. Wilna Geringer, Akira Hasegawa, Tatsuya Hinoki, Masashi Shimada, Dean Buchenauer, Yasuhisa Oya, Takeo Muroga 233 Recent R&D Results on Fusion Nuclear Technology for ITER and DEMO Reactor in Japan Toshihiko Yamanishi, Norikiyo Koizumi, Masataka Nakahira, Yoshihiko Nunoya, Satoshi Suzuki, Hiroyuki Tobari, Mieko Kashiwagi, Takaaki Isono, Takashi Inoue, Makoto Sugimoto, Yoshinori Kusama, Yoshinori Kawamura, Hiroyasu Tanigawa, Masaru Nakamichi, Takashi Nozawa, Tsuyoshi Hoshino, Yoshio Ueda, Yuji Hatano, Takeo Muroga, Satoshi Fukada 242 Examples of What Fusion Energy Can Contribute to the Near Term Needs of Society Before We Build the First Fusion Power Plant G. L. Kulcinski, J.
    [Show full text]