2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session K33: Novel Moving Boundary Problems
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 336
Sponsoring
Unit:
GSNP
Chair: Wim Saarloos, Leiden University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.K33.3
Abstract: K33.00003 : Spark formation as a moving boundary process
3:42 PM–4:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Ute Ebert
(CWI Amsterdam and TU Eindhoven)
The growth process of spark channels recently becomes accessible
through complementary methods. First, I will review experiments
with nanosecond photographic resolution and with fast and well
defined power supplies that appropriately resolve the dynamics of
electric breakdown [1]. Second, I will discuss the elementary
physical processes as well as present computations of spark
growth and branching with adaptive grid refinement [2]. These
computations resolve three well separated scales of the process
that emerge dynamically. Third, this scale separation motivates a
hierarchy of models on different length scales. In particular, I
will discuss a moving boundary approximation for the ionization
fronts that generate the conducting channel. The resulting moving
boundary problem shows strong similarities with classical viscous
fingering. For viscous fingering, it is known that the simplest
model forms unphysical cusps within finite time that are
suppressed by a regularizing condition on the moving boundary.
For ionization fronts, we derive a new condition on the moving
boundary of mixed Dirichlet-Neumann type
($\phi=\epsilon\partial_n\phi$) that indeed regularizes
all structures investigated so far. In particular, we present
compact analytical solutions with regularization, both for
uniformly translating shapes and for their linear perturbations
[3]. These solutions are so simple that they may acquire a
paradigmatic role in the future. Within linear perturbation
theory, they explicitly show the convective stabilization of a
curved front while planar fronts are linearly unstable against
perturbations of arbitrary wave length.
\newline
[1] T.M.P. Briels, E.M. van Veldhuizen, U. Ebert, TU Eindhoven.
\newline
[2] C. Montijn, J. Wackers, W. Hundsdorfer, U. Ebert, CWI
Amsterdam.
\newline
[3] B. Meulenbroek, U. Ebert, L. Sch\"afer, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf
95}, 195004 (2005).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.K33.3