Spontaneous branching of anode-directed streamers between planar electrodes
Physical Review Letters, 2002•APS
Nonionized media subject to strong fields can become locally ionized by penetration of
finger-shaped streamers. We study negative streamers between planar electrodes in a
simple deterministic continuum approximation. We observe that, for sufficiently large fields,
the streamer tip can split. This happens close to the limit of “ideal conductivity.” Qualitatively,
the tip splitting is due to a Laplacian instability quite like that in viscous fingering. For future
quantitative analytical progress, our stability analysis of planar fronts identifies the screening …
finger-shaped streamers. We study negative streamers between planar electrodes in a
simple deterministic continuum approximation. We observe that, for sufficiently large fields,
the streamer tip can split. This happens close to the limit of “ideal conductivity.” Qualitatively,
the tip splitting is due to a Laplacian instability quite like that in viscous fingering. For future
quantitative analytical progress, our stability analysis of planar fronts identifies the screening …
Abstract
Nonionized media subject to strong fields can become locally ionized by penetration of finger-shaped streamers. We study negative streamers between planar electrodes in a simple deterministic continuum approximation. We observe that, for sufficiently large fields, the streamer tip can split. This happens close to the limit of “ideal conductivity.” Qualitatively, the tip splitting is due to a Laplacian instability quite like that in viscous fingering. For future quantitative analytical progress, our stability analysis of planar fronts identifies the screening length as a regularization mechanism.
American Physical Society
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