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We present the first successful simulation of a induced disruption in ASDEX Upgrade from massive material injection (MMI) up to established runaway electron (RE) beam, thus covering pre-thermal quench, thermal quench and current quench (CQ) of the discharge. For future high-current fusion devices such as ITER, the successful suppression of REs through MMI is of critical importance to ensure the structural integrity of the vessel. To computationally study the interplay between MMI, background plasma response, and RE generation, a toolkit based on the 1.5D transport code coupling ASTRA-STRAHL is developed. Electron runaway is described by state-of-the-art reduced kinetic models in the presence of partially ionized impurities. Applied to argon MMI in ASDEX Upgrade discharge #33108, key plasma parameters measured experimentally, such as temporal evolution of the line averaged electron density, plasma current decay rate and post-CQ RE current, are well reproduced by the simulation presented. Impurity ions are transported into the central plasma by the combined effect of neoclassical processes and additional effects prescribed inside the $q = 2$ rational surface to explain experimental time scales. Thus, a thermal collapse is induced through strong impurity radiation, giving rise to a substantial RE population as observed experimentally.
The formation of a substantial post-disruption runaway electron current in ASDEX Upgrade material injection experiments is determined by avalanche multiplication of a small seed population of runaway electrons. For the investigation of these scenario
First simulations of deuterium shattered pellet injection (SPI) into an ASDEX Upgrade H-Mode plasma with the JOREK MHD code are presented. Resistivity is increased by one order of magnitude in most simulations to reduce computational costs and allow
Synchrotron radiation images from runaway electrons (REs) in an ASDEX Upgrade discharge disrupted by argon injection are analyzed using the synchrotron diagnostic tool SOFT and coupled fluid-kinetic simulations. We show that the evolution of the runa
The plasma response to Resonant Magnetic Perturbations (RMPs) in ASDEX Upgrade is modeled with the non-linear resistive MHD code JOREK, using input profiles that match those of the experiments as closely as possible. The RMP configuration for which E
Improved understanding of runaway-electron formation and decay processes are of prime interest for the safe operation of large tokamaks, and the dynamics of the runaway electrons during dynamical scenarios such as disruptions are of particular concer