Absolute calibration of the Lyman- α measurement apparatus at DIII-D
Author(s)
Laggner, F.M.; Bortolon, A.; Rosenthal, Aaron M.; Wilks, Theresa M.; Hughes, Jerry W.; Freeman, C.; Golfinopoulos, T.; Nagy, A.; Mauzey, D.; Shafer, M.W.; DIII-D Team; ... Show more Show less
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The LLAMA (Lyman-Alpha Measurement Apparatus) diagnostic was recently installed on the DIII-D tokamak [Rosenthal et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. (submitted) (2020)]. LLAMA is a pinhole camera system with a narrow band Bragg mirror, a bandpass interference filter, and an absolute extreme ultraviolet photodiode detector array, which measures the Ly-α brightness in the toroidal direction on the inboard, high field side (HFS) and outboard, low field side (LFS). This contribution presents a setup and a procedure for an absolute calibration near the Ly-α line at 121.6 nm. The LLAMA in-vacuum components are designed as a compact, transferable setup that can be mounted in an ex situ vacuum enclosure that is equipped with an absolutely calibrated Ly-α source. The spectral purity and stability of the Ly-α source are characterized using a vacuum ultraviolet spectrometer, while the Ly-α source brightness is measured by a NIST-calibrated photodiode. The non-uniform nature of the Ly-α source emission was overcome by performing a calibration procedure that scans the Ly-α source position and employs a numerical optimization to determine the emission pattern. Nominal and measured calibration factors are determined and compared, showing agreement within their uncertainties. A first conversion of the measured signal obtained from DIII-D indicates that the Ly-α brightness on the HFS and LFS is on the order of 1020 Ph sr^{−1} m^{−2} s^{−1}. The established calibration setup and procedure will be regularly used to re-calibrate the LLAMA during DIII-D vents to monitor possible degradation of optical components and detectors.
Description
Submitted for publication in Review of Scientific Instruments
Date issued
2021-03Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Plasma Science and Fusion CenterJournal
Review of Scientific Instruments
Publisher
AIP
Other identifiers
21ja060