Alcator C-Mod Weekly Highlights March 2, 1998 Operation of Alcator C-Mod was stopped last tuesday when a short across the TF bus occurred early in the ramp-up phase of shot 15. Since that time we have been warming up the machine so that we can open the bus tunnel and determine the location of the damage. We estimate access will be possible tomorrow morning, March 3rd. The protective crowbar circuit operated properly, and the short cleared quickly. However, up to 1.5 MJ of energy was dissipated in the arc before it cleared. In view of the time needed to warm up and inspect the tokamak to determine and correct the cause of the fault, it is probable that we shall decide to stop the winter plasma campaign and move into our scheduled maintenance and upgrade phase. Part of the run plan from last Tuesday was completed before the fault. The machine was boronized over the weekend and helium ECDC was run until Monday morning. Deuterium ECDC was then run overnight. It was hoped that a period of deuterium ECDC would help post boronization startup. Fiducial discharges were readily obtained on Tuesday morning and were of very good quality. We then began work on mp194, ICRF Reversed Shear Mode with 3He Minority at 80 MHz. One 8T H-mode was obtained (150 kJ) which will be very useful for power absorption analysis. Early heating during the current ramp-up was also begun. The initial guess on He concentration was probably too high, but we did not have time to reduce the concentration before the end of the run. Preliminary break-in-slope analysis indicated some off_axis mode conversion electron heating. Work on the DNB last week included improvements to the MOD/REG 120 VAC service, installation of the computer interface connections to the secondary emission/thermocouple chassis, fabrication of the first five optical transmitter and receiver boards, and installation of the fast isolation amplifier boards. Work continues on the HV supplies, MOD/REG system, and master control logic system. Professor Cy MacLatchy from Acadia University, Nova Scotia, met with Brian LaBombard and the C-Mod edge group on monday and tuesday to discuss experimental plans during the next year. Cy will be spending part of his upcoming sabbatical leave (august 98 - july 99) participating in divertor/edge experiments on C-Mod. Possible areas of research include: video image-capture and tomographic reconstructions of impurity injection "plumes", analysis of divertor plate probes data, operation and analysis of Omegatron-probe ion-mass spectrometry. Gerd Schilling and Gary Taylor from PPPL continued to work at C-Mod last week on RF analysis and the new ECE polychromator. Roger Bengtson and his graduate student David Winslow were here from the University of Texas, Austin, to work on their scanning probe.