Collaboration website » The first Annual Meeting of this Collaboration brought together 75 national and international participants. There were 7 plenary talks and 25 poster presentations. Most of the latter were presented by participants who are not funded by the Collaboration but came from near and far to share their perspectives and pose interesting questions which were subjects of stimulating discussions. A significant number of the presenters were postdoctoral scholars and graduate students. The enthusiastic response from the community exceeded our expectations, and was inspiring. We concluded the meeting with a palpable sense that the recent impressive experimental results from the Wendelstein-7X stellarator in Germany, presented at the Workshop, marked a defining moment in the long quest for fusion energy, and that the community was at the cusp of a new era of stellarator concept exploration in which the Simons Collaboration is likely to play a critical role. It will do so by contributing fundamental mathematical and physical insights, and by producing SIMSOPT (Simons Optimization code), which will build on the existing foundation of stellarator optimization codes and serve as the next-generation design tool for stellarators with hidden symmetries. Read more of the report in the section below:

Report plus--large The challenge of finding 3D optimum magnetic fields with hidden symmetries encompasses mathematical and computational problems of great subtlety, straddling optimization theory, plasma physics, dynamical systems, and the analysis of partial differential equations. The plenary talks presented at the meeting demonstrated that interdisciplinary breadth, and showcased new results obtained by the Collaboration in the first year. An overview of the Collaboration and the principal new results (A. Bhattacharjee) was followed by a presentation of the seminal experimental results from the principal stellarator experiments in the world (T. S. Pedersen) and plans for a novel electron-positron experiment (E. Stenson). A lucid tutorial on mathematical foundations of stellarator theory (P. Helander) was followed by a treatment of quasi-symmetry in the elegant language of differential forms, an exploration of whether exact quasi-symmetry is realizable, and the derivation of a novel form of Grad-Shafranov equation for quasi-symmetric configurations (R. MacKay). A computational method and code, which calculates magnetostatic equilibria as extrema of a constrained energy functional, and an external coil geometry that can produce a given equilibrium was discussed (S. Hudson). New results were presented on constructing magnetic fields with hidden symmetries based on a direct method which employs analytic Taylor expansions, demonstrating that there remains a vast space of stellarator design that remains to be explored by extant experiments (M. Landreman). A new analytic theory of turbulent transport was presented which demonstrates how 3D shaping can be used to reduce turbulent transport in stellarators. Last but not least, the promise of mathematical and computational developments in robust, multi-objective optimization theory in the context of SIMSOPT was discussed (D. Bindel). Four out of five Advisory Board members of the Collaboration participated in the meeting, and met with the team after the meeting.

Talks

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Amitava Bhattacharjee

Princeton University Hidden Symmetries and Fusion Energy

View Slides (PDF) The most compelling transformational use of magnetically confined, high-temperature plasma is to realize sustained fusion energy. The tokamak, which is the leading magnetic confinement concept in the world today, has the topology of a torus and continuous symmetry with respect to the toroidal angle, giving it good confinement properties. In the stellarator, which is the leading alternative to the tokamak, the confining magnetic field is mostly produced by external current-carrying coils. In contrast to the tokamak, stellarators rely on symmetry breaking to realize the magnetic field needed to confine particles. Over the last few decades, a new concept has emerged in the design of stellarators, giving rise to a renaissance—-the remarkable discovery that it is possible to design 3D magnetic confinement devices with hidden symmetries that can have the same virtues as tokamaks while overcoming some of the inherent drawbacks of the latter. An example of a hidden symmetry, known as “quasi-symmetry,” is that the magnitude B of the magnetic vector field B has an ignorable coordinate (in a special curvilinear coordinate system) even though B does not. The primary purpose of this collaboration, supported by the Simons Foundation, is to create and exploit an effective mathematical and computational framework for the design of stellarators with hidden symmetries. Existing experiments show that stellarator design optimization holds the key to successful performance. Results from the Helically Symmetric Experiment (HSX) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) experiment at the Max Planck Institute of Plasma Physics in Greifswald (Germany), which started opation about three years ago, are very encouraging, compelling the design of the next generation stellarator. The challenge of finding 3D optimum magnetic fields with hidden symmetries encompasses mathematical and computational problems of great subtlety, straddling optimization theory, plasma physics, dynamical systems, and the analysis of partial differential equations. We have, therefore, assembled a multi-disciplinary team of world experts in these disciplines, reflecting the breadth and importance of our challenge. Synthesizing the understanding developed through our research, our goals include a modern stellarator optimization code that can exploit the full power of petascale and exascale computers, and a few optimal designs of next-generation stellarator experiments.

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Thomas Sunn Pedersen and Eve Stenson

Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics Experimental stellarator research: Recent results and near-term plans View Slides (PDF) Stellarators provide a potentially attractive concept for fusion power production, owing to their intrinsic steady-state capabilities and a lack of violent plasma instabilities. However, high confinement at high ion temperatures has in the past been an elusive goal, primarily owing to poorly confined single-particle orbits despite the magnetic field lines being confined to a toroidal shape. A new generation of stellarators has started demonstrating that this and other issues of importance for a fusion reactor can be addressed successfully by a careful optimization of the magnetic field. After a short introduction into magnetic fusion research and stellarators, we will review key achievements from advanced stellarators in the world, in particular from the largest and most optimized stellarator, Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X), which recently started operation (2015). With a 30-cubic-meter plasma volume, a superconducting coil system operating at 2.5 T, and steady-state plasma heating capability of up to 10 MW, it will be capable of demonstrating the benefits of optimized stellarators at parameters approaching those of a fusion power plant. Some of the first results already demonstrate key features of the optimization, including strongly reduced toroidal currents [1], and long confinement times at relatively high ion temperatures (τ>200 msec at T i >3.5 keV) [2]. The last part of the talk will describe near-future plans for optimized stellarator experiments, in particular for a tabletop-sized, highly optimized stellarator experiment to confine and study electron-positron plasmas. Due to the perfect symmetry in mass between the two charged-particle species, electron-positron plasmas have unique properties [3, 4], and are particularly sensitive to the optimization of single-particle orbits in stellarators. [1] A. Dinklage et al. Nature Physics (2018)

[2] T. Sunn Pedersen et al., Plasma Phys. Contr. Fusion (2018)

[3] Tsytovic and Wharton Comm. Plasma Phys. Contr. Fusion (1978)

[4] E. V. Stenson et al, Journal of Plasma Physics (2017)

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Per Helander

Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics, Greifswald, Germany Mathematical description of Stellarators View Slides (PDF) In this talk, an overview of the theory of stellarator plasmas for mathematically able non-specialists will be given. Gaps in our present understanding and open mathematical problems will be particularly emphasized. On the simplest useful level, magnetically confined plasmas plasma can be described by magnetohydrodynamic equations. The question of existence and regularity of 3D time-independent solutions to these equations is an old and difficult problem. Most solutions are believed to possess chaotic magnetic field lines and/or a countable infinity of tangential discontinuities, which should be taken into account when constructing approximate numerical solutions. Recent progress and outstanding problems in this area will be reviewed. A more detailed description of the plasma is furnished by the Boltzmann equation, augmented by an electromagnetic force and (usually) simplified to account for the fact that the magnetic field is relatively large, resulting in the so-called drift-kinetic or gyro-kinetic equations. Without the collision term, the characteristics of these equations describe collisionless particle orbits. Because the collision frequency is relatively small in hot plasmas, the great majority of these orbits should stay within the plasma if the latter is to be well confined by the magnetic field. This condition, that most collisionless particle orbits should not leave the plasma region, is not satisfied by most magnetic fields and thus calls for optimization. It is strictly ensured if the magnetic field has an exact continuous symmetry, and it is approximately (suitably defined) ensured if the field has an approximate symmetry, e.g., if it is “quasisymmetric’’ of “omnigenous”. These concepts will be explained, and existence theorems (or the lack thereof) discussed. Regardless of whether the magnetic field possesses these symmetries, it is possible to find nearly time-independent solutions to the full kinetic equation by means of a Chapman-Enskog-type expansion, giving valuable information about the energy losses from the plasma. As expected, these losses are relatively small in quasisymmetric or omnigenous plasmas, and it also turns out that these symmetries affect other experimentally important properties of the plasma, such as the electric current that flows through the plasma and its rotation. Fully time-dependent solutions of the kinetic equation usually show that the plasma is turbulent, with effectively random fluctuations in density, temperature and other parameters causing a degradation in confinement. A great unknown is how the magnetic geometry affects this turbulence and whether the latter can be substantially reduced by magnetic field optimization.

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Robert MacKay

University of Warwick The search for hidden symmetries and quantification of effects of imperfect symmetry on confinement View Slides (PDF) The study of confinement of a charged particle in a strong magnetic field has from the beginning been greatly aided by an excellent approximate symmetry, namely rotation of the particle’s “gyroradius vector” around its “guiding center.” This reduces the problem (to high accuracy) to that of confining the guiding center. If the guiding-center motion has a continuous symmetry then the guiding center is confined to a specific region associated to its initial condition, generically the projection of an invariant 2-torus to position-space. More formally, the guiding-center motion is “integrable.” An obvious example of such symmetry occurs if the magnetic field has rotation symmetry about some axis. This is the principle of tokamaks. They have the defects, however, that they need a strong toroidal current to make the confinement tight, driving such a current for long times is not easy, and it generates instabilities. Stellarators are a class of magnetic confinement devices in which no toroidal current is required. To achieve integrability without axisymmetry, however, requires a hidden symmetry, called quasi-symmetry. Although this can be achieved to a good approximation, it is widely believed that exact quasi-symmetry is impossible. Yet it is worth keeping in mind the amazing result of Kovalevskaya that in addition to the axisymmetric integrable tops of Lagrange there is a family of non-axisymmetric integrable tops. I will report on our search for magnetic fields with exact quasi-symmetry. Even if quasi-symmetry is achievable only approximately, all is not lost. Integrability is not necessary for confinement of guiding centers. If the magnetic field is smooth and close enough to having quasi-symmetry there is generically a fat Cantor set of invariant 2-tori in the 3D space representing guiding centers with given energy and magnetic moment. Guiding centers trapped between two of these 2-tori are confined almost as well as those exactly on a 2-torus. I will report on the development of methods to determine the complement of the fat Cantor set. This is a set to be minimised by the optimisers in our team, at least in the interior of the plasma. Regions not on invariant tori are important, however, for the design of “divertors”, structures in the magnetic field that scrape off particles from outside the main plasma region to keep a clear gap between the plasma and the vacuum vessel and to control removal of impurities and fusion products. In reality, there are deviations from the above picture. Firstly, the guiding center approximation is not perfect, in particular for the high-energy alpha-particles that would be produced by fusion of tritium with deuterium, and if the magnetic field is not very smooth (as could result from near-singular current distributions). Secondly, the magnetic (and electric) field is time-dependent, for example due to turbulence, and this leads to diffusion of particles from their ideal motion. Thirdly, the particles in a machine interact, which causes exchange of energy and magnetic moment between guiding centers and relative shifts of the guiding centers, hence additional diffusive effects. Such effects have been and are being addressed by others in our team and elsewhere, but we believe there is value in pinning down the single-particle guiding-center motion more precisely, as here.

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Stuart Hudson

Australian National University The numerical construction of stellarator equilibria and coil design View Slides (PDF) This talk shall describe the numerical construction of a magnetically confined plasma in macroscopic force balance with an externally applied magnetic field that is produced by an arrangement of external currents, commonly referred to as coils. The magnetohydrodynamic equilibrium state of the plasma and the coil geometry are given as the solution. The plasma equilibrium is obtained as an appropriately constrained minimum of the plasma energy functional. A restriction upon the boundary conditions supplied to the resulting differential equation is required to avoid non-physical and non-tractable solutions. The coil geometry is obtained by minimizing an error functional that quantifies how well the coils provide the magnetic field required to hold the plasma in equilibrium. An adjustable penalty on the length allows the user to control how geometrically deformed the coils are.

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Matt Landreman

University of Maryland Constructing magnetic fields with hidden symmetry View Slides (PDF) Historically, magnetic fields with a hidden symmetry implying good particle confinement (quasisymmetry) have been found using optimization. However, a direct geometric construction of quasisymmetric fields, pioneered by Garren and Boozer, is also possible. While the construction is limited to high aspect ratio (shapes resembling a skinny bicycle tire), it has several advantages compared to optimization, such as orders-of-magnitude reduced computational cost and opportunities for analytic insight. We prove an existence and uniqueness theorem for the construction, enabling precise understanding of the size of the solution space. We also demonstrate that the central regions of quasisymmetric fields obtained by optimization match the construction. It is shown that the construction can be modified for a more general confinement condition, omnigenity. The speed of the construction enables wide and high-resolution numerical searches to identify and map the interesting regions of parameter space.

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Chris Hegna

University of Wisconsin-Madison Turbulent Transport Optimization in Stellarators View Slides (PDF) A frontier research area in stellarator optimization is to use 3D shaping of the magnetic field geometry to reduce turbulent transport. Micro-instability induced turbulent transport is the dominant transport channel in present-day optimized stellarators. The ability to define means to control the turbulence properties of magnetic confinement devices through external magnetic fields has the potential to considerably improve the attractiveness of magnetic fusion. As directly coupling nonlinear turbulence simulation codes into stellarator optimization schemes is impractical, the approach pursued here is to develop an analytically based “metrics” for turbulence transport rates that can be easily incorporated into optimization tools. Recent work has focused on understanding turbulent saturation properties. The theory relies on a paradigm of nonlinear energy transfer from unstable to damped eigenmodes at comparable wavelength as the dominant turbulent saturation process. This mechanism is enabled by a three-wave interaction where the identity of the dominant nonlinear energy process is controlled by the properties of the 3D geometry. The nonlinear energy transfer physics is quantified by the product of a turbulent correlation lifetime and a geometric coupling coefficient. The turbulent correlation time is determined by a three-wave frequency mismatch, which can be calculated from the sum of the linear eigenfrequencies of the three modes. Larger turbulent correlation times denote larger levels of nonlinear energy transfer and hence smaller turbulent transport. The theory provides an analytic prediction for how 3D shaping can be used to lower turbulent transport in stellarators. Initial comparisons of the theoretical predictions with nonlinear turbulent simulations are favorable. In particular, the theory suggests that quasi-helically symmetric configurations may have an intrinsic advantage with regard to turbulent saturation relative to other optimized stellarators. An important next step in this work is to implement the turbulent optimization metric into optimization design studies. We will show recent progress on this front.

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David Bindel

Cornell University Global, robust, multi-objective optimization of stellarators View Slides (PDF) We cannot measure how good a stellarator is with a single number. Among other things, an “optimal” stellarator should approximately satisfy desirable field symmetries, satisfy macroscopic and local stability, minimize different types of transport, and minimize engineering complexity. We also want designs that are robust to small variations and do not require unrealistically tight tolerances for coil manufacturing and placement. These objectives and constraints are complicated, non-convex functions fo the plasma boundary and coil shapes, and they may be subject to subtle tradeoffs. In this talk, we describe why state-of-the-art stellarator optimization tools do not yet fully explore the range of design tradeoffs to find robustly “optimal” designs. We discuss formulations of robust optimization and show some results achieved by members of our group in the context of stellarator optimization. We then discuss the shortcoming of the “scalarization” formulation of multi-objective optimization used in the current generation of stellarator optimizers, showing why this approach may miss parts of the Pareto frontier of best tradeoffs. Finally, we discuss how to go beyond “black box” approaches with optimization algorithms that use both derivative information and physics-based approximations to quickly explore and converge to the globally best parts of the design space.