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(FTP2/08) Compact Stellarator Coils

N. Pomphrey1), L. A. Berry2), A. H. Boozer3), A. Brooks1), R. Hatcher1), S. Hirshman2), L. P. Ku1), W. Miner4), H. Mynick1), W. Reiersen1), D. Strickler2), P. Valanju4)
 
1) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton, NJ 08543, USA
2) Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-8070, USA
3) Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA
4) University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712-1081, USA

Abstract.  Experimental devices to study the physics of high-beta ( $ \beta$ $ \gtrsim$ 4%), low aspect ratio ( A $ \lesssim$ 4.5) stellarator plasmas require coils that will produce plasmas satisfying a set of physics goals, provide experimental flexibility, and be practical to construct. In the course of designing a flexible coil set for the National Compact Stellarator Experiment, we have made several innovations that may be useful in future stellarator design efforts. These include: the use of Singular Value Decomposition methods for obtaining families of smooth current potentials on distant coil winding surfaces from which low current density solutions may be identified; the use of a Control Matrix Method for identifying which few of the many detailed elements of the stellarator boundary must be targeted if a coil set is to provide fields to control the essential physics of the plasma; the use of Genetic Algorithms for choosing an optimal set of discrete coils from a continuum of potential contours; the evaluation of alternate coil topologies for balancing the tradeoff between physics objective and engineering constraints; the development of a new coil optimization code for designing modular coils, and the identification of a ``natural'' basis for describing current sheet distributions

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IAEA 2001