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Conceptual design and proof-of-principle testing of the real-time multispectral imaging system MANTIS

Author
Abstract

The Multispectral Advanced Narrowband Tokamak Imaging System (MANTIS) is proposed to resolve the steep temperature and density gradients in the scrape-off layer of tokamaks in real-time. The initial design is to deliver two-dimensional distributions of key plasma parameters of the TCV tokamak to a real-time control system in order to enable novel control strategies, while providing new insights into power exhaust physics in the full offline analysis. This paper presents the conceptual system design, the mechanical and optical design of a prototype that was built to assess the optical performance, and the results of the first proof-of-principle tests of the prototype. These demonstrate a central resolving power of 50-46 line pairs per millimeter (CTF 50 ) in the first four channels. For the additional channels, the sharpness is a factor two worse for the odd channels (likely affected by sub-optimal alignment), while the even channels continue the trend observed for the first four channels of 3% degradation per channel. This is explained by the self-cancellation of off-axis aberrations, which is an attractive property of the chosen optical design. The results show that at least a 10-channel real-time multispectral imaging system is feasible.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Journal of Instrumentation
Volume
12
Issue
12
Number of Pages
C12058
DOI
10.1088/1748-0221/12/12/C12058
PId
140b7559e1026039ca49cd7294a91f13
Alternate Journal
J. Instrum.
Journal Article
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