IEA Task 5 2002 Meeting - Photo Gallery
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The lounging seals at Seal Beach in La Jolla, California, April 14, 2002.
Tonio Pinna stated "It is not a bad life for them. |
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The DIII-D control room. |
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Peter Petersen explaining the divertor of DIII-D on the wall display. |
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Peter was discussing some overhead RF heating transfer lines. |
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Personnel safety precautions to enter power supply rooms. Keys to unlock the doors must be obtained from the operator. |
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The on-site helium liquefier (150 liter/h) and the 4,000 liter liquid helium storage dewar. |
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Electrical isolation for neutral beam power. |
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One of the CPI gyrotron units. |
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The Gycom gyrotron unit from Russia, nicknamed Boris. The 2nd unit is nicknamed Natasha. |
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Outside the DIII-D building, near some of the primary cooling water system piping. |
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Outdoor transformers and rectifier cabinets for electron cyclotron heating power. |
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More transformers for ECH power. |
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Transformers for the neutral beam injectors. Crowbar switches are inside the rooms on the left. |
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The 138 kV local electrical utility incoming feeder lines to DIII-D. |
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After machine shutdown, we were able to enter the machine floor and see the torus. |
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This is the 270R0 port, which has the manhole where personnel enter the vacuum vessel during a vent. The items on the port flange are parts of the Michelson Horizontal Electron Cyclotron Emission diagnostic. |
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The DIII-D vessel can be seen behind these diagnostics, magnet coils, and other equipment.
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Magnet cooling water hoses under the center of the DIII-D torus. |
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The DIII-D facility sign near the building entryway. |
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Neutron shielding roof for DIII-D. The roof is in position over the torus in this photograph; DIII-D is in operation. |