Columbia Linear Machine (CLM)
The Columbia Linear Machine (CLM) is a quiescent, steady-state linear
machine designed for fundamental plasma studies. It has been devoted to the
production and study of instabilities believed to be principal candidates
responsible for the degraded confinement in tokamaks and the observed
anomalous transport of particles and heat and the exploration of feedback
control techniquest to stabilize the instabilities. The principal
investigator is
Prof. Amiya K. Sen. The students who run the machine are:
Johannes S. Chiu.
Here are some of the current features of CLM:
- Differential pumping produces collisionless hydrogen plasma in the
experimental region.
- A movable magnetic coil in the experimental region can be energized
and used to form a magnetic field. The current in the magnet control the
fraction of the trapped particles, while the axial location determines the
mirror length.
- An ICRF mesh in the transistion region ensures heating of ions in the
radial center of the plasma, hence producing an ion temperature gradient,
facilitating the studies of the Ion Temperature Gradient (ITG) instabilities.
- A small ion beam source (IBS) is located at the end of the experimental
region. This ion beam (also configurable as an electron beam) is used as
a remote suppressor for feedback control studies.
If you want to see the Columbia Linear Machine in more detail, here is
a cross-sectional view of the machine
(122K Jpeg).
These are the modes that have been or are being studied in CLM:
- Curvature driven trapped ion/particle instability(TPI)
- Ion temperature gradient Instability (ITG)
- ExB rotational flute mode
Several means of diagnosis are available in CLM:
- Langmuir probes are used to measure the density, electron temperature
and various anomalous fluctuations.
- Gridded ion energy analyzers are used to measure ion temperature.
- Emissive probes are used to measure plasma potential.
Here are some of the students that have graduated from this group:
- John T. Slough, PhD. thesis titled "Production and experimental study
of the dissipative trapped ion instability", 1981.
- Alan B. Plaut, PhD. thesis titled " Growth rate, saturation and radial
transport for the trapped ion instability", 1986.
- Robert Scarmozzino, PhD. thesis titled "Production and study of a
collisionless trapped particle instability", 1987.
- Akihisa Sekiguchi, PhD. thesis titled " Stabilization of plasma
instabilities using halo feedback and ion beam suppressor", 1991.
- Jiong Chen, PhD. thesis titled "Production and study of the ion
temperature gradient instabilities", 1992.
- Philip Tham, PhD. thesis titled "Feedback control of plasma instabilties
with charged particle beams and study of plasma turbulence", 1994.
If you want to know more about CLM, the best place is to look up the
following published papers:
- G.A. Navratil, J. Slough and A.K. Sen, Phys. Rev. Lett., 47 ,
1057, (1981).
- R. Scarmozzino, A.K. Sen, and G.A. Navratil, Phys. Rev. Lett., 57
, 1729 , (1986).
- A. Sekguchi, A.K. Sen, and G.A. Navratil, Halo feedback control of
trapped particle instabilities , IEEE trans. Plama Sci.,
PS-18 , 695 (1990).
- R.G. Greaves, J. Chen, and A.K. Sen, Experimental studies of an ion temperature
gradient driven instability in a linear machine , Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion, 34 , 1253 (1992).
- P. Tham and A.K. Sen, Feedback stabilization of plasma instabilities
using a modulated ion beam , Phys. of Fluids B, 4 , 3058 (1992).
- P. Tham and A.K. Sen, Remote multimode feedback stabilization of plasma
instabilities , Phys. Rev. A, 46 , 8, R4520 (1992).
Back to Plasma Physics Lab page.