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Abstract. Experiments are needed to test and extend present understanding
of confinement, macroscopic stability, alpha-driven instabilities, and
particle/power exhaust in plasmas dominated by alpha heating. A key issue
is to what extent pressure profile evolution driven by strong alpha heating
will act to self-organize advanced configurations with large bootstrap
current fractions and internal transport barriers. A design study of a
Fusion Ignition Research Experiment (FIRE) is underway to assess near term
opportunities for advancing the scientific understanding of self-heated
fusion plasmas. The emphasis is on understanding the behavior of fusion
plasmas dominated by alpha heating (Q 5) that are sustained for
durations comparable to the characteristic plasma time scales (
20
and
, where
is the time for the plasma current profile to
redistribute at fixed current). The programmatic mission of FIRE is to
attain, explore, understand and optimize alpha-dominated plasmas to provide
knowledge for the design of attractive magnetic fusion energy systems. The
programmatic strategy is to access the alpha-heating-dominated regime with
confidence using the present advanced tokamak data base (e.g., Elmy-H-mode,
0.75 Greenwald density) while maintaining the flexibility for
accessing and exploring other advanced tokamak modes (e. g., reversed shear,
pellet enhanced performance) at lower magnetic fields and fusion power for
longer durations in later stages of the experimental program. A major goal
is to develop a design concept that could meet these physics objectives with
a construction cost in the range of $1B.
IAEA 2001