Alcator C-MOD Weekly Highlights July 9, 1996 We are now working to close up the vessel and pump down by the end of this week. A great deal of work has been done in the last few days including diagnostic calibrations and alignments, and installation of glow discharge, tangential interferometer, shutter, edge Thomson scattering, and divertor gas puff components. We have also begun to bring engineering systems such as bus instrumentation, vessel heaters and thermocouples, oxygen monitors, and access control back on-line. The alternator was brought up to full speed last week. We found that the rotor alignment was still not acceptable, and we are now working with GE (prime contractor for the inspection) to make adjustments. Difficulties in the installation of the support studs for the cryopump and its 300K shield have delayed this project somewhat. These issues are now resolved, and we are proceeding as quickly as possible. The glow discharge coaxes have been installed invessel and fitups of the the electrodes completed successfully. Final installation will occur as soon as the cryopump installation is complete. Ferrites have been installed on one of our X2274 final amplifier tubes which had exhibited high-frequency parasitic oscillations. Similar problems were observed in X2274 tubes at PPPL and were corrected in the same way. If this fix is successful, other tubes will be checked for parasitic oscillations and fixed if necessary. This change will make operation possible with any of our spare final amplifier tubes. During the last week, we have also continued installation of new RF transmitter components. The final amplifier cavity for transmitter #3 has been assembled and placed in position in the power room. Mounting configurations for coaxial switches, the dummy load, and tuners are being finalized. Work continues on various aspects of the Texas/MIT collaboration. Vinny Bertolino and Joe Bosco continued their visit at the University of Texas Fusion Research Center last week. They spent most of their time discussing documentation with both current and former FRC staff members. They now feel confident that some of the major DNB components are sufficiently well documented for disassembly to begin. Working with FRC personnel, we have also developed a shipping schedule and work list that will deliver DNB components to MIT as quickly as available manpower will allow. FRC scientists have also begun work on the optics needed to couple their 1st harmonic O-mode radiometer to our ECE beamline. This radiometer will be used to study electron temperature fluctuations. We were delighted to learn that four invited talks will be given on Alcator C-Mod results at the next APS meeting in Denver: P. Bonoli, Electron heating via Mode Converted Ion Bernstein Waves in the Alcator C-Mod tokamak G. M. McCracken, Impurity Screening in Ohmic and H-Mode Plasmas in the Alcator C-Mod Tokamak J. Rice, Observations of Parallel and Perpendicular Impurity Transport from Alcator C-Mod Plasmas Y. Takase, ICRF-heated Enhanced Confinement Modes in the Alcator C-Mod Tokamak