Simulating the nonlinear interaction of relativistic electrons and tokamak plasma instabilities: Implementation and validation of a fluid model
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 13:38 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A fluid model for runaway electrons is implemented in JOREK to simulate their nonlinear interaction with tokamak plasma instabilities during disruptions.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The model considers runaway electrons as a fluid species with initial seed from the Dreicer source that grows by avalanche. Advection is primarily along field lines plus ExB drift. Implemented in JOREK with Bezier finite elements and current coupling. Benchmarked with the GO code on artificial thermal quench in circular plasma. Applied to axisymmetric cold vertical displacement event in ITER plasma, showing significantly different dynamics with and without runaway electrons.
What carries the argument
The runaway electron fluid species with Dreicer and avalanche sources, advected along field lines and ExB, coupled to MHD via current in the JOREK code.
If this is right
- The implementation allows self-consistent simulation of nonlinear RE-MHD interactions during disruptions.
- Benchmarking with GO code validates the model on a thermal quench scenario.
- Application to ITER VDE shows that runaway electrons change the plasma evolution dynamics.
- The code is suitable for studying MHD-RE interactions in disruption-relevant plasmas.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Additional runaway source mechanisms can be incorporated into the fluid framework as noted.
- The current limitation on achieving light-speed velocities suggests future numerical improvements could enable more realistic simulations.
- This fluid approach could be tested against kinetic models for specific instability types.
- Insights from such simulations may inform runaway electron mitigation techniques in tokamaks.
Load-bearing premise
Runaway electrons can be represented adequately as a fluid species whose main motion is along field lines with ExB drift.
What would settle it
Simulation results that diverge from experimental measurements of runaway electron current or from a full kinetic simulation during a disruption event.
Figures
read the original abstract
For the simulation of disruptions in tokamak fusion plasmas, a fluid model describing the evolution of relativistic runaway electrons and their interaction with the background plasma is presented. The overall aim of the model is to self-consistently describe the nonlinear coupled evolution of runaway electrons (REs) and plasma instabilities during disruptions. In this model, the runaway electrons are considered as a separate fluid species in which the initial seed is generated through the Dreicer source, which eventually grows by the avalanche mechanism (further relevant source mechanisms can easily be added). Advection of the runaway electrons is considered primarily along field lines, but also taking into account the ExB drift. The model is implemented in the nonlinear magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) code JOREK based on Bezier finite elements, with current coupling to the thermal plasma. Benchmarking of the code with the one-dimensional runaway electron code GO is done using an artificial thermal quench on a circular plasma. As a first demonstration, the code is applied to the problem of an axisymmetric cold vertical displacement event in an ITER plasma, revealing significantly different dynamics between cases computed with and without runaway electrons. Though it is not yet feasible to achieve fully realistic runaway electron velocities close to the speed of light in complete simulations of slowly evolving plasma instabilities, the code is demonstrated to be suitable to study various kinds of MHD-RE interactions in MHD-active and disruption relevant plasmas.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper presents a fluid model for relativistic runaway electrons implemented in the JOREK nonlinear MHD code. The model includes Dreicer and avalanche sources for RE generation, advection along field lines and ExB drift, and current coupling to the thermal plasma. It is benchmarked against the GO code using an artificial thermal quench on a circular plasma and demonstrated on an axisymmetric cold vertical displacement event in an ITER plasma, showing different dynamics with and without REs. The aim is to self-consistently describe the nonlinear coupled evolution of REs and plasma instabilities during disruptions, with the caveat that realistic RE velocities near c are not yet feasible in full simulations.
Significance. If the reduced-velocity approximation can be shown not to distort the coupling, this would provide a useful tool for studying RE-MHD interactions in tokamak disruptions. The benchmarking against GO and the ITER VDE demonstration are positive, but the absence of quantitative validation metrics limits the immediate impact.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim of self-consistent nonlinear coupled evolution requires that the parallel velocity enters the current and instability drive terms. The paper explicitly states realistic v ~ c is not yet feasible; the reduced speeds used therefore alter the effective RE current density and its back-reaction on the MHD fields, so the demonstrated differences in the ITER VDE case may not reflect the true coupled dynamics.
- [Benchmarking] Benchmarking description: the comparison with the GO code on an artificial thermal quench reports no quantitative error metrics, mesh convergence data, or analysis of how fluid closure assumptions affect the results, weakening support for the implementation's accuracy on the central claim.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract would be clearer if it stated the specific reduced advection speeds employed in the simulations.
- Figure captions should explicitly describe what is being compared in the with/without RE cases for the VDE demonstration.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments. We address each major point below, agreeing where the manuscript can be strengthened and clarifying the scope of our claims where appropriate.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim of self-consistent nonlinear coupled evolution requires that the parallel velocity enters the current and instability drive terms. The paper explicitly states realistic v ~ c is not yet feasible; the reduced speeds used therefore alter the effective RE current density and its back-reaction on the MHD fields, so the demonstrated differences in the ITER VDE case may not reflect the true coupled dynamics.
Authors: We agree that the reduced parallel velocity approximation necessarily alters the magnitude of the RE current density and the quantitative strength of its back-reaction on the MHD fields. The manuscript already states that realistic velocities near c are not yet feasible in full simulations. The ITER VDE demonstration is presented as an illustration of qualitative differences that arise when REs are included, rather than a quantitative prediction of real-device dynamics. We will revise the abstract and the relevant discussion sections to explicitly qualify the self-consistent coupling as being demonstrated under the reduced-velocity approximation and to temper the central claim accordingly. revision: yes
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Referee: [Benchmarking] Benchmarking description: the comparison with the GO code on an artificial thermal quench reports no quantitative error metrics, mesh convergence data, or analysis of how fluid closure assumptions affect the results, weakening support for the implementation's accuracy on the central claim.
Authors: We accept that the benchmarking section would be strengthened by quantitative metrics. In the revised manuscript we will add relative error measures between the JOREK fluid model and the GO code for key integrated quantities (total current, RE density, and thermal energy) at selected times during the artificial quench. We will also include a short discussion of mesh convergence for the JOREK runs used in the benchmark and a brief assessment of the fluid closure assumptions and their expected influence on the comparison. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity: model implementation validated externally
full rationale
The paper presents a fluid model for runaway electrons (Dreicer + avalanche sources, field-line + ExB advection, current coupling) implemented in JOREK, with benchmarking against the independent 1D GO code on an artificial thermal quench and demonstration on an ITER VDE case. No equations or results reduce by construction to fitted parameters defined from the same data. No self-citation is load-bearing for the central claim of self-consistent nonlinear evolution. The work is a numerical implementation with standard components, externally validated, and self-contained against benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
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discussion (0)
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