Results from current drive experiments on the Helicity Injected Torus

Abstract
The Helicity Injected Torus [T. R. Jarboe, Fusion Technol. 15, 7 (1989)] is a low aspect ratio tokamak that is formed and sustained by coaxial helicity injection with no transformer. Toroidal plasma currents of over 200 kA have been achieved with electron temperatures in the 100 eV range and electron density between 1019 and 1020m−3. The major radius is 0.3 m and the minor radius is 0.2 m. New results from equilibrium and stability analysis of the external magnetic diagnostics and new results from the Transient Internal Probe (TIP), an internal magnetic field diagnostic, are presented. A mechanism for the transfer of current drive on the open to the closed flux regions is presented.