Nonlinear oscillations of the amplitude of energetic-particle induced geodesic acoustic modes
Abstract
Energetic particle induced geodesic acoustic modes (EGAMs) are axisymmetric perturbations of the radial electric field in tokamak plasmas. They are driven unstable by the phase space nonuniformity of a population of energetic particles (EP). In this paper, the nonlinear oscillation in the amplitude of the energetic-particle induced geodesic acoustic modes is studied by means of the gyrokinetic particle-in-cell code ORB5. Similarities are discussed with the beam-plasma instability (BPI), where a Langmuir wave is driven unstable by phase space nonuniformity of a population of energetic electrons. A similar scaling of the nonlinear oscillation frequency as a function of the mode amplitude is found for the EGAMs and for the BPI, confirming that their nonlinear dynamics is strongly determined by the same physical mechanisms. As a product of this study, a novel diagnostics is proposed for the evaluation of the EGAM intensity in tokamak plasmas.
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