The reflection of an ionized shock wave
From MaRDI portal
Abstract: In a previous paper we studied the thermodynamic and kinetic theory for an ionized gas, in one space dimension; in this paper we provide an application of those results to the reflection of a shock wave in an electromagnetic shock tube. Under some reasonable limitations, which fully agree with experimental data, we prove that both the incident and the reflected shock waves satisfy the Lax entropy conditions; this result holds even outside genuinely nonlinear regions, which are present in the model. We show that the temperature increases in a significant way behind the incident shock front but the degree of ionization does not undergo a similar growth. On the contrary, the degree of ionization increases substantially behind the reflected shock front. We explain these phenomena by means of the concavity of the Hugoniot loci. Therefore, our results not only fit perfectly but explain what was remarked in experiments.
Recommendations
Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 4070476 (Why is no real title available?)
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 692341 (Why is no real title available?)
- A mathematical model of ionized gases: thermodynamic properties
- The Riemann problem for fluid flow of real materials
- The reflection of an ionized shock wave
Cited in
(9)- One-dimensional viscous and heat-conducting ionized gas with density-dependent viscosity
- Asymptotic behavior of solutions of initial-boundary value problems for 1D viscous and heat-conducting ionized gas
- Spontaneous acoustic emission from strong ionizing shocks
- Diffuse ion instability upstream terrestrial bow shock
- Splitting shock heating between ions and electrons in an ionized gas
- The reflection of an ionized shock wave
- A mathematical model of ionized gases: thermodynamic properties
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3843430 (Why is no real title available?)
- Large-time behavior of global solutions to the Cauchy problem of one-dimensional viscous and heat-conducting ionized gas
This page was built for publication: The reflection of an ionized shock wave
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q1655451)