13th Runaway Electron Modelling meeting Back
June 15th — June 18th 2026
at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
Registration/abstract submission
opens January 19th.
13th Runaway Electron Modelling meeting
Runaway electron generation in plasmas is a phenomenon that is rich in basic physics and has also great practical importance. It is a candidate mechanism for electron acceleration in solar flares, it is frequently observed in electric discharges associated with thunderstorms, and it occurs also in tokamak disruptions, when the plasma current is forced to change too quickly and a large electric field is induced. In tokamaks, runaways may damage plasma facing components due to their highly localized energy deposition. The potential for detrimental effects increases with plasma current. Therefore, understanding the processes that may eliminate runaway beam formation is very important for future reactor-scale tokamaks with high currents, such as ITER.
The aim of the meeting is to make progress in the modelling of runaway electron dynamics, with a particular focus to runaways in tokamak disruptions. This meeting is open to **all interested researchers**.
**The meeting takes place at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden**.
Lorenzo Votta
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Linn Ekman
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Everybody is asked to book their hotel rooms individually. There are several options in and around Stockholm. KTH is located centrally, to the northern edge of central Stockholm, with a number of hotels nearby. KTH is also well connected to the subway, bus and commuter rail systems.