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Plasma microturbulence is a critical issue to the magnetic fusion program because it controls the energy confinement and thereby determines the performance of a burning plasma experiment. A key goal of magnetic fusion programs worldwide is the construction and operation of a burning plasma experiment. The performance of such an experiment is determined by the rate at which energy is transported out of the hot core (where fusion reactions take place) to the colder edge plasma (which is in contact with material surfaces). The dominant mechanism for this transport of thermal energy is plasma microturbulence excited by radial gradients in the plasma temperature and density. Science Application: Fusion Science Project Title: Center for Simulation of Plasma Microturbulence (CSPM)
Principal Investigator: William M. Nevins Project Webpage: http://fusion.gat.com/theory/CSPM
Participating Institutions and Co-Investigators: Funding Partners: Office of Science — Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research and Office of Fusion Energy Sciences Budget and Duration: Approximately $0.85 million per year for three years 1 1Subject to acceptable progress review and the availability of appropriated funds
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