Statistical analysis of resistive drift wave turbulence
Paper in proceeding, 2017

Resistive drift wave turbulence is a multipurpose paradigm that can be used to understand transport at the edge of fusion devices. The Hasegawa-Wakatani model captures the essential physics of drift turbulence while retaining the simplicity needed to gain a qualitative understanding of this process. We provide a theoretical interpretation of numerically generated probability density functions (PDFs) of intermittent events in Hasegawa-Wakatani turbulence with enforced equipartition of energy in large scale zonal flows and small scale drift turbulence. We find that for a wide range of adiabatic index values the stochastic component representing the small scale turbulent eddies of the flow, obtained from the ARIMA model, exhibits super-diffusive statistics, consistent with intermittent transport. The PDFs of large events (above one standard deviation) are well approximated by the Laplace distribution, while small events often exhibit a Gaussian character. Furthermore there exist a strong influence of zonal flows for example, via shearing and then viscous dissipation maintaining a sub-diffusive character of the fluxes.

Author

Johan Anderson

Chalmers, Earth and Space Sciences, Plasma Physics and Fusion Energy

22nd NEXT meeting in Kyoto, 9-10th March 2017

Subject Categories

Physical Sciences

Fusion, Plasma and Space Physics

Roots

Basic sciences

More information

Created

10/7/2017