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Inelastic collapse and near-wall localization of randomly accelerated particles

The inelastic collapse of stochastic trajectories of a randomly accelerated particle moving in half-space $z > 0$ has been discovered by McKean and then independently re-discovered by Cornell et. al. The essence of this phenomenon is that particle arrives to a wall at $z = 0$ with zero velocity after an infinite number of inelastic collisions if the restitution coefficient $β$ of particle velocity is smaller than the critical value $β_c=\exp(-π/\sqrt{3})$. We demonstrate that inelastic collapse takes place also in a wide class of models with spatially inhomogeneous random force and, what is more, that the critical value $β_c$ is universal. That class includes an important case of inertial particles in wall-bounded random flows. To establish how the inelastic collapse influence the particle distribution, we construct an exact equilibrium probability density function $ρ(z,v)$ for particle position and velocity. The equilibrium distribution exists only at $β<β_c$ and indicates that inelastic collapse does not necessarily mean the near-wall localization.

preprint2016arXivOpen access

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