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  • 1
    ISSN: 1089-7623
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: An interferometer with compensation for vibration and large scale mechanical movements has been designed and built to measure the line integral electron density along three different lines of sight through the JET divertor plasma. Overcoming the effects of a long transmission path, having an estimated 65 dB loss, requires oversized waveguide transmission lines, sensitive heterodyne detection, low loss quasioptical circuits, and highly stable sources. The sources are frequency doubled, phase-locked, Gunn oscillators producing 15 mW at 130 GHz and 10 mW at 200 GHz. Waveguide Schottky mixer diodes generate reference and output signals at an IF of 10.7 MHz and the LO Gunn diodes are phase locked to the reference IF. Corrugated feedhorns and ellipsoidal mirrors are used for beam control and polarizing wire grids for beam splitting and recombination. To minimize unwanted, direct coupling of source power into the signal detectors, Brewster angle beam dumps and Faraday rotation isolators are used in the transmit and receive QO circuits, which in turn are separated, on opposite faces of a vertical plate. Martin–Pupplet polarizing interferometers are used to multiplex the two colors into a single coaligned, copolar output beam and to demultiplex the return beam. Constant fraction discriminators are used to optimize the accuracy of the phase detectors, which have sampling and recording rates of 1 MHz and a resolution of ∼7° (0.02 fringe). © 1995 American Institute of Physics.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Review of Scientific Instruments 66 (1995), S. 1154-1158 
    ISSN: 1089-7623
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: An interferometer with compensation for vibration and large scale mechanical movements has been designed and built to measure the line integral electron density along three different lines of sight through the JET divertor plasma. Overcoming the effects of a long transmission path, having an estimated 65 dB loss, requires oversized waveguide transmission lines, sensitive heterodyne detection, low loss quasioptical circuits, and highly stable sources. The sources are frequency doubled, phase-locked, Gunn oscillators producing 15 mW at 130 GHz and 10 mW at 200 GHz. Waveguide Schottky mixer diodes generate reference and output signals at an IF of 10.7 MHz and the LO Gunn diodes are phase locked to the reference IF. Corrugated feedhorns and ellipsoidal mirrors are used for beam control and polarizing wire grids for beam splitting and recombination. To minimize unwanted, direct coupling of source power into the signal detectors, Brewster angle beam dumps and Faraday rotation isolators are used in the transmit and receive QO circuits, which in turn are separated, on opposite faces of a vertical plate. Martin–Pupplet polarizing interferometers are used to multiplex the two colors into a single coaligned, copolar output beam and to demultiplex the return beam. Constant fraction discriminators are used to optimize the accuracy of the phase detectors, which have sampling and recording rates of 1 MHz and a resolution of ∼7° (0.02 fringe). © 1995 American Institute of Physics.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Review of Scientific Instruments 63 (1992), S. 5022-5022 
    ISSN: 1089-7623
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: A Bragg rotor spectrometer uses diffractors ranging from LiF (420) (2d=0.18 nm) to a multilayer mirror (Ni–C 2d=11.7 nm). The extension to longer wavelengths is particularly useful at JET, where radiated power and Zeff are usually dominated by light impurities such as Be and C, whose H- and He-like transitions lie between about 2.5 and 10 nm. A hexagonal rotor scans six diffractors sequentially and gives either full coverage of the soft x-ray spectrum (to monitor a range of ionization stages of any possible impurity), or high monochromatic sensitivity (to monitor trace impurities and give time resolution of ∼10 μs for the study of transient events such as impurity injection). A large area gas proportional counter covers a Bragg angle range from 20° to 70°, with each of its ten anodes being connected to an independent amplifier-discriminator chain, allowing count rates up to 20 MHz to be processed. Moderate resolving power is provided by a 1:600 Soller collimator. A smaller rotor is mounted with a side-by-side array of four small diffractors, and is reciprocated over a relatively small Bragg angle range to give a time resolution of 20 ms for about ten representative lines (for routine analysis of radiated power components).
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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