Reconnection and merging of positive streamers in air
S. Nijdam, C. G. C. Geurts, E. M. van Veldhuizen, U. Ebert

TL;DR
This study uses stereo-photography to analyze three-dimensional structures of positive streamer discharges in air, revealing frequent reconnections and rare merging events under specific conditions, enhancing understanding of streamer interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed 3D analysis of streamer reconnection and merging phenomena, clarifying their occurrence and conditions in air discharges.
Findings
Reconnections occur frequently in positive streamers.
Merging was observed only at low pressure and small tip separation.
Merging is rare and depends on specific pressure and geometry conditions.
Abstract
Pictures show that streamer or sprite discharge channels emerging from the same electrode sometimes seem to reconnect or merge though their heads carry electric charge of the same polarity; one might therefore suspect that reconnections are an artifact of the two-dimensional projection in the pictures. Here we use stereo-photography to investigate the full three-dimensional structure of such events. We analyze reconnection, possibly an electrostatic effect in which a late thin streamer reconnects to an earlier thick streamer channel, and merging, a suggested photoionization effect in which two simultaneously propagating streamer heads merge into one new streamer. We use four different anode geometries (one tip, two tips, two asymmetric protrusions in a plate, and a wire), placed 40 mm above a flat cathode plate in ambient air. A positive high voltage pulse is applied to the anode,…
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