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A unique experiment in the Joint European Torus (JET) consecutively produced 120 almost identical plasma pulses, providing two orders of magnitude more data than is usually available. This allows the statistical detection of previously unobservable p henomena such as a sequence of resonant-like waiting times between edge-localised instabilities (ELMs). Here we investigate the causes of this phenomenon. By synchronising data to the 1000s of ELM times and averaging the results, random errors are reduced by a factor of 50, allowing unprecedentedly detailed behaviour to be described. A clear link can then be observed between plasma confinement, ELM occurrence, vertical plasma oscillations, and an otherwise unobservable oscillation in a control coil current that is not usually associated with ELM occurrence. The results suggest a strong and unanticipated edge-plasma dependence on control system behaviour.
Defects in crystalline silicon consisting of a silicon self-interstitial atom and one, two, three, or four hydrogen atoms are studied within density-functional theory (DFT). We search for low-energy defects by starting from an ensemble of structures in which the atomic positions in the defect region have been randomized. We then relax each structure to a minimum in the energy. We find a new defect consisting of a self-interstitial and one hydrogen atom (denoted by {I,H}) which has a higher symmetry and a lower energy than previously reported structures. We recover the {I,H_2} defect found in previous studies and confirm that it is the most stable such defect. Our best {I,H_3} defect has a slightly different structure and lower energy than the one previously reported, and our lowest energy {I,H_4} defect is different to those of previous studies.
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