Runaway Electron Generation by Decelerating Streamers in Inhomogeneous Atmosphere
Andrey Starikovskiy, Nickolay Aleksandrov, Mikhail Shneider

TL;DR
This paper uses numerical simulations to explore how decelerating positive and negative streamers in atmospheric pressure air can generate runaway electrons and X-ray bursts, revealing mechanisms behind these phenomena.
Contribution
It demonstrates that decelerating positive streamers can produce pulsed runaway electron beams, explaining observed X-ray bursts during streamer activity.
Findings
Negative streamers stop as their electric field decreases.
Positive streamers can generate runaway electrons when the head potential drops below ~1.2 kV.
Runaway electron beams have energies up to 2.6 kV depending on conditions.
Abstract
The dynamics of positive and negative streamers is numerically simulated in atmospheric pressure air. It is shown that positive and negative streamers behave in radically different ways when decelerating and stopping. When the head potential drops, the negative streamer transits to the mode in which the propagation is due to the forward electron drift. In this case, the radius of the ionization wave front increases, whereas the electric field at the streamer head decreases further and the streamer stops. The only advancement mechanism for a positive streamer with decreasing head potential is a decrease in the effective radius of the ionization wave, leading to a local increase in the electric field. This mechanism compensates for the decrease in the efficiency of gas photoionization at small head diameters. The local electric field at the streamer head can exceed the runaway threshold…
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