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Fusion Science and Technology
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Nicholas Tsoulfanidis—ANS member since 1969
As an undergraduate I studied physics at the University of Athens. I entered the university in 1955 after successfully passing a national exam (came up fourth in a field of about 700 candidates). Upon graduation and finishing my mandatory two-year military service, the plan was to teach physics either in a public high school or as a tutor for a private for-profit institution, preparing high school students for the national exam.
V. E. Bykov, A. V. Georgievskij, V. V. Demchenko, Yu. K. Kuznetsov, Yu. A. Litvinenko, A. V. Longinov, O. S. Pavlichenko, V. A. Rudakov, K. N. Stepanov, V. T. Tolok
Fusion Science and Technology | Volume 17 | Number 1 | January 1990 | Pages 140-147
Technical Paper | Stellarator System | doi.org/10.13182/FST90-A29177
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
The analysis of an l = 2 torsatron with a relatively small pitch angle of the helical winding, which requires an additional toroidal field (TF), is presented. The main advantage of this torsatron design, as compared with a conventional torsatron having a large helical winding pitch angle and no TF coils, is the reduction of the helical winding current and the helical ripple of the magnetic field. This facilitates construction and operation of the most complicated component of the magnetic system, the helical winding, and also reduces the plasma losses due to magnetic field ripple. An experimental device of this type, URAGAN-2M, now under construction at the Kharkov Institute of Physics and Technology, is described. The reactor prospects of this concept are also discussed.