Effects of Collectively Induced Scattering of Gas Stream by Impurity Ensembles: Shock-Wave Enhancement and Disorder-Stimulated Nonlinear Screening
Abstract
We report on specific effects of collective scattering for a cloud of heavy impurities exposed to a gas stream. Formation is presented of a common density perturbation and shock waves, both generated collectively by a system of scatterers at sudden application of the stream-inducing external field. Our results demonstrate that (i) the scattering of gas stream can be essentially amplified, due to nonlinear collective effects, upon fragmentation of a solid obstacle into a cluster of impurities (heterogeneously fractured obstacle); (ii) a cluster of disordered impurities can produce considerably stronger scattering accompanied by enhanced and accelerated shock wave, as compared to a regularly ordered cluster. We also show that the final steady-state density distribution is formed as a residual perturbation left after the shock front passage. In particular, a kink-like steady distribution profile can be formed as a result of shock front stopping effect. The possibility of the onset of solitary diffusive density-waves, reminiscent of precursor solitons, is shown and briefly discussed.
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