Files

Abstract

Singular currents typically appear on rational surfaces in non-axisymmetric ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equilibria with a continuum of nested flux surfaces and a continuous rotational transition. These currents have two components: a surface current (Dirac δ-function in flux surface labeling) that prevents the formation of magnetic islands, and an algebraically divergent Pfirsch–Schlüter current density when a pressure gradient is present across the rational surface. On flux surfaces adjacent to the rational surface, the traditional treatment gives the Pfirsch–Schlüter current density scaling as $J\sim1/\Delta\iota$, where $\Delta\iota$ is the difference of the rotational transform relative to the rational surface. If the distance s between flux surfaces is proportional to $\Delta\iota$, the scaling relation $J\sim1/\Delta\iota\sim1/s$ will lead to a paradox that the Pfirsch–Schlüter current is not integrable. In this work, we investigate this issue by considering the pressure-gradient-driven singular current in the Hahm–Kulsrud–Taylor problem, which is a prototype for singular currents arising from resonant magnetic perturbations. We show that not only the Pfirsch–Schlüter current density but also the diamagnetic current density are divergent as ${\sim}1/\Delta\iota$. However, due to the formation of a Dirac δ-function current sheet at the rational surface, the neighboring flux surfaces are strongly packed with $s\sim(\Delta\iota)^{2}$. Consequently, the singular current density $J\sim1/\sqrt{s}$, making the total current finite, thus resolving the paradox. Furthermore, the strong packing of flux surfaces causes a steepening of the pressure gradient near the rational surface, with $\nabla p \sim \mathrm {d}p/\mathrm {d}s \sim 1/\sqrt{s}$. In general non-axisymmetric MHD equilibrium, contrary to Grad's conjecture that the pressure profile is flat around densely distributed rational surfaces, our result suggests a pressure profile that densely steepens around them.

Details

Actions

Preview