Pegasus Toroidal Experiment
The Pegasus Toroidal Experiment is a plasma confinement experiment relevant to fusion power production, run by the Department of Engineering Physics of the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It is a spherical tokamak, a very low-aspect-ratio version of the tokamak configuration, i.e. the minor radius of the torus is comparable to the major radius.
Device Type | Spherical tokamak |
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Location | Madison, Wisconsin, US |
Affiliation | University of Wisconsin–Madison |
Technical specifications | |
Major Radius | 45 cm (18 in) |
Minor Radius | 40 cm (16 in) |
Links | |
Website | Pegasus Toroidal Experiment webpage |
Local Helicity Injection
Pegasus is used to study start up of spherical tokamaks using local helicity injection.[1][2]
URANIA
Pegasus is being upgraded in 2019 (eg. by removal of the central solenoid) to build the Unified Reduced Non-Inductive Assessment (URANIA) experiment. This will study plasma startup using transient coaxial helicity injection (CHI).[2][1]
The max toroidal field is being increased from 0.15 T to 0.6 T, and the pulse duration from 25 to 100 ms.[3]
References