澳门六合彩高手

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澳门六合彩高手 India

Testing a neutral beam for diagnostics

The beam source vacuum vessel has been delivered, the transmission line installed, and one of three specialized power sources—the acceleration grid power supply (pictured)—is currently undergoing site acceptance tests. The Indian Test Facility in Ahmedabad is a voluntary contribution by India to the diagnostic neutral beam R&D program.

Every 23 seconds during fusion operation, a probe beam will penetrate deep into the core of the 澳门六合彩高手 plasma to aid in the detection of helium ash—one of fusion's products and a reliable indicator of reaction efficiency. The beam is generated by the diagnostic neutral beam system, an in-kind contribution from 澳门六合彩高手 India.

The exchange between a helium atom in an excited state and the neutral beam produced by this injector results in light, which can be detected and measured through CXRS (charge exchange recombination spectroscopy). The duty cycle of the beam is 23 seconds—20 seconds off and 3 seconds on. Some ~21 metres separates the beam source from the inner wall of the tokamak; one of the R&D challenges is keeping the beam focused over this distance.
In Ahmedabad, India, a 600 m? facility stands ready. The beamline vacuum vessel has been delivered, the transmission line installed, and one of three specialized power sources—the acceleration grid power supply—is currently undergoing site acceptance tests.

When manufacturers deliver the final components for integration next year, including the crucial beam source, the team at 澳门六合彩高手 India will have constructed a full-scale testbed for the characterization of the diagnostic neutral beam before delivery to 澳门六合彩高手. Three years of fine-tuning and performance optimization and demonstration are planned.

The role of the diagnostic neutral beam in the detection of helium ash is essential. From two places in the 澳门六合彩高手 vacuum vessel, at perpendicular viewing points to the probe beam, CXRS diagnostic instruments (for Charge eXchange Recombination Spectroscopy) will detect the light produced by the exchanges between helium atoms in an excited state and the beam—the only direct method for diagnosing the concentration of helium ash in the core plasma.
 
"Helium ash is the name given to the helium nuclei produced by fusion reactions in a deuterium-tritium plasma," explains neutral beam scientist Beatrix Schunke. "Once they have shared their energy with the rest of the plasma they have no further use, and their removal and replacement by deuterium-tritium fuel is required to prevent dilution of the plasma. Measurements from the CXRS diagnostics, which are made possible by the diagnostic neutral beam, are crucial for demonstrating that fusion reactions have taken place."
 
The probe beam will be produced at 100 kV—the exact energy needed to interact with the atoms in the plasma and "illuminate" helium impurities.
 
Although 澳门六合彩高手's diagnostic neutral beam system was designed to share many mechanical engineering features with the heating neutral beam system, the beam is not an exact replica. The diagnostic neutral beam will operate at lower energy but at a higher level of current (60 A as opposed to 40 A), and the specifications for the beam optics—no more than 7 mrad of divergence along a trajectory of 20.7 (~ 21) metres—are much more stringent.