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id title section difficulty estimated_time prerequisites objectives tags
phys-06 Streamers vs Leaders: Transition Sequence Spark Growth Physics intermediate 45 [phys-05] [Distinguish between streamer and leader discharge mechanisms Understand the 6-step streamer-to-leader transition sequence Recognize the efficiency differences between streamer and leader growth Apply this knowledge to optimize coil operating modes] [streamers leaders photoionization thermal-ionization transition mechanisms]

Streamers vs Leaders: Transition Sequence

Not all sparks are created equal. Two fundamentally different propagation mechanisms exist: streamers and leaders. Understanding the differences and transition between them is crucial for optimizing Tesla coil performance.

Streamer Characteristics

Streamers are thin, fast, cold plasma channels:

Physical Properties

Diameter: 10-100 μm (thinner than human hair)
Velocity: ~10⁶ m/s (1% speed of light!)
Temperature: 1000-3000 K (weakly ionized)
Current: mA to tens of mA (low)
Resistance: MΩ range (high)
Thermal time: ~0.1-0.2 ms (fast cooling)

Propagation Mechanism: Photoionization

How streamers propagate:

  1. Electric field accelerates electrons in partially ionized tip region
  2. Energetic electrons collide with neutral molecules, creating excited states
  3. Excited molecules emit UV photons (de-excitation radiation)
  4. UV photons travel ahead of the streamer tip (speed of light)
  5. UV ionizes neutral air ahead (photoelectric effect), creating seed electrons
  6. Seed electrons avalanche in high field at tip
  7. New ionized region forms ahead of previous tip
  8. Process repeats → rapid propagation

Key insight: Propagation driven by photons (electromagnetic radiation), not thermal effects. This is why streamers are FAST - limited only by ionization avalanche time, not thermal diffusion.

Visual Appearance

Color: Purple/blue (N₂ molecular emission lines)
Structure: Highly branched, tree-like
Persistence: Brief flashes (<1 ms visible)
Brightness: Moderate (low current)
Pattern: Random, fractal-like branching

Energy Efficiency

ε_streamer ≈ 50-150+ J/m (high, inefficient)

Energy distribution:
- Ionization: ~1%
- Radiation (UV, visible): ~30-50%
- Heating: ~20-40%
- Branching losses: ~20-40%
- Extension: ~5-10% (poor efficiency!)

Why inefficient?

  • Energy dumped into radiation (bright UV and visible light)
  • Massive branching (many failed paths)
  • Low current → high resistance → voltage drop limits length
  • No thermal memory between events

Leader Characteristics

Leaders are thick, slower, hot plasma channels:

Physical Properties

Diameter: 1-10 mm (visible as bright core)
Velocity: ~10³ m/s (walking speed to car speed)
Temperature: 5000-20,000 K (fully ionized)
Current: 100 mA to several A (high)
Resistance: kΩ range (low)
Thermal time: ~50-600 ms (slow cooling)

Propagation Mechanism: Thermal Ionization

How leaders propagate:

  1. High current flows through existing channel
  2. Joule heating (I²R) raises channel temperature
  3. Thermal ionization occurs as temperature exceeds ~5000 K
    • Collisional ionization from thermal energy
    • Lower resistance as more ions/electrons created
  4. Hot channel tip heats adjacent air by conduction/radiation
  5. Adjacent air ionizes thermally
  6. Leader extends into newly ionized region
  7. Process repeats → steady growth

Key insight: Propagation driven by heat transfer (thermal effects), much slower than photoionization. But more efficient energy use - heat stays in channel.

Visual Appearance

Color: White/orange (blackbody + line emission)
Structure: Straighter, fewer branches
Persistence: Seconds with sustained power (or buoyant rise)
Brightness: Very bright (high current)
Pattern: More directed, follows field lines

Energy Efficiency

ε_leader ≈ 5-20 J/m (low, efficient)

Energy distribution:
- Ionization: ~5-10%
- Heating to operating T: ~30-50%
- Extension work: ~20-40%
- Radiation: ~10-20%
- Branching: ~5-10% (minimal)

Why efficient?

  • Heat stays in channel (thermal memory)
  • High current → low resistance → efficient power transfer
  • Straighter path (less branching waste)
  • Thermal ionization more efficient than repeated photoionization
  • Energy accumulates in single hot channel

Comparison Table

Property Streamers Leaders
Diameter 10-100 μm 1-10 mm
Velocity ~10⁶ m/s ~10³ m/s
Temperature 1000-3000 K 5000-20,000 K
Current mA 100 mA - A
Resistance
Color Purple/blue White/orange
Branching Highly branched Straighter
Persistence <1 ms Seconds
Mechanism Photoionization Thermal ionization
ε (J/m) 50-150+ 5-20
Efficiency Poor Good

The 6-Step Transition Sequence

Streamers can transition to leaders if sufficient current and time are provided:

Step 1: High E-Field Creates Initial Streamers

t = 0 μs
- High voltage applied to topload
- E_tip exceeds E_inception (~2-3 MV/m)
- Photoionization avalanche begins
- Multiple thin streamers form from topload
- Characteristics: Fast, purple, branched
- Temperature: ~2000 K
- Current: mA per streamer

Step 2: Sufficient Current Flows → Joule Heating

t = 10-100 μs
- Circuit provides sustained current (not just brief discharge)
- Current concentrates in one or few dominant streamers
- Joule heating: P = I²R
- Channel temperature begins rising
- Temperature: 2000 → 3000 K
- Resistance begins decreasing

Step 3: Heated Channel → Thermal Ionization Begins

t = 100 μs - 1 ms
- Temperature reaches ~5000 K (thermal ionization threshold)
- Collisional ionization adds to photoionization
- Ionization density increases dramatically
- Resistance drops further → more current → more heating
- Positive feedback loop: heat → ionization → conductivity → current → heat
- Temperature: 3000 → 8000 K
- Current increasing to 100+ mA

Step 4: Leader Forms from Base

t = 1-3 ms
- Hottest region (base, near topload) becomes fully ionized
- True leader channel established at base
- Leader characteristics appear: thick, white, hot
- Temperature: 8000 → 15,000 K at base
- Current: several 100 mA
- Diameter expands to ~1-3 mm

Critical insight: Leader forms from base (topload) and grows downward, not from tip!

Step 5: Leader Tip Launches New Streamers

t = 3-10 ms
- Hot leader base established
- Leader tip (interface) still has high E-field
- Tip launches new streamers ahead (photoionization)
- Streamers probe forward, find path
- Temperature gradient: 15,000 K (base) → 5000 K (tip) → 2000 K (streamers)

Step 6: Fed Streamers Convert to Leader

t = 5-20 ms (continuous process)
- Current flows through newly formed streamers
- Streamers heat up → thermal ionization
- Hot leader channel "catches up" to streamer paths
- Leader extends forward
- Process repeats: tip launches streamers → streamers heat → leader extends
- Continuous growth cycle

Final state:
- Main channel: hot leader (white, thick, efficient)
- Active tip: transition zone with streamers
- Failed branches: cool streamers (purple, thin)

{image:streamer-to-leader-transition-sequence}

Why This Transition Matters

For QCW Coils (Designed for Leader Formation)

Timeline optimized for transition:
t = 0-1 ms: Streamer inception
t = 1-5 ms: Transition to leader
t = 5-20 ms: Leader growth dominates
Result: Low ε (5-15 J/m), long sparks

QCW design requirements:

  • Sustained current capability (not just brief pulse)
  • Moderate ramp time (5-20 ms allows transition)
  • Adequate voltage maintenance
  • Result: Efficient leader formation

For Burst Mode (Mostly Streamers)

Timeline too short for transition:
t = 0-50 μs: Streamer inception
t = 50-200 μs: Brief heating begins
t = 200 μs: Pulse ends (typical)
t = 200 μs - 5 ms: Cooling (no power)
Result: High ε (30-100+ J/m), short bright sparks

Burst mode characteristics:

  • High peak power creates bright streamers
  • Pulse too short for full leader transition
  • Channel cools between pulses
  • Next pulse restarts from streamers
  • Result: Spectacular but inefficient

Hybrid Modes (Mixed Behavior)

Timeline allows partial transition:
t = 0-0.5 ms: Streamers
t = 0.5-2 ms: Partial leader formation at base
t = 2-5 ms: Mixed streamer/leader growth
Result: Moderate ε (20-40 J/m), balanced performance

Physical Intuition: The "Thermal Runway"

Think of the transition as climbing a thermal runway:

Altitude (Temperature) vs Time:

0 K     ▬▬▬▬▬ Ground (cold air, insulator)

2000 K  ━━━━━ Streamer plateau (photoionization)
        ▲
        │ Need sustained current to climb
        │
5000 K  ━━━━━ Leader threshold (thermal ionization begins)
        ▲
        │ Positive feedback: easier to climb
        │
15000 K ━━━━━ Fully developed leader

        Time →

Burst mode: Brief rocket boost (high power) gets to 2000 K, but fuel runs out (pulse ends) before reaching 5000 K. Falls back to ground.

QCW mode: Sustained climb (continuous power) reaches 5000 K and beyond. Once at leader plateau, stays there efficiently.

Practical Observations

High-Speed Photography Evidence

Time-resolved imaging shows:

0-100 μs:

  • Multiple thin purple streamers from topload
  • Branching, exploring paths
  • No thick core visible

1-3 ms:

  • White glow appearing near topload
  • Base region brightening
  • Purple streamers still at extremities

5-20 ms:

  • Thick white core from topload partway down
  • Purple streamers at tip only
  • Clear leader/streamer boundary

After power off:

  • White leader core persists (seconds, rising)
  • Purple streamers disappear immediately

{image:high-speed-photography-leader-formation}

Energy Measurements

Direct calorimetry and electrical measurements confirm:

Same total energy (100 J):

Burst mode: 100 J → 1.2 m spark
  ε ≈ 83 J/m
  Mostly streamers

QCW mode: 100 J → 8 m spark
  ε ≈ 12.5 J/m
  Mostly leaders

Ratio: 6.7× better length efficiency for leaders!

WORKED EXAMPLE: Estimating Transition Time

Given:

  • Initial streamer resistance: R₀ = 10 MΩ
  • Initial current: I₀ = 20 mA (from voltage source)
  • Power deposition: P = I²R = (0.02)² × 10×10⁶ = 4000 W
  • Channel mass per meter: m ≈ 0.001 kg/m (100 μm diameter, 1 m long)
  • Heat capacity of air: c_p ≈ 1000 J/(kg·K)
  • Target temperature for leader: T_leader = 5000 K (from T_amb = 300 K)

Find: Estimated heating time to leader threshold (simplified model)

Solution

Energy required to heat channel:
Q = m × c_p × ΔT
  = 0.001 kg/m × 1000 J/(kg·K) × (5000 - 300) K
  = 1 kg·J/(kg·K) × 4700 K
  = 4700 J per meter

Time to deliver this energy:
t = Q / P
  = 4700 J/m / 4000 W
  = 1.175 s per meter (!)

Wait, this seems too long! What's wrong?

Reality check - positive feedback:

  1. As temperature rises, resistance drops
  2. Lower resistance → more current (V = I×R, fixed V)
  3. More current → more heating (P = I²R)
  4. Exponential growth, not linear!

Improved estimate with feedback:

R(T) ≈ R₀ × (T₀/T)^2 (approximate scaling)

At T = 5000 K:
R ≈ 10 MΩ × (300/5000)² ≈ 36 kΩ (250× reduction!)

Current increases dramatically:
I ≈ 20 mA × √(10 MΩ / 36 kΩ) ≈ 330 mA

Power increases:
P ≈ (330 mA)² × 36 kΩ ≈ 3,920 W (similar, but delivered more efficiently)

More realistic time (accounting for exponential feedback):
t_transition ≈ 1-5 ms (observed in experiments)

Key insight: Positive feedback accelerates the transition once started. This is why leaders form "explosively" after threshold.


Key Takeaways

  • Streamers: Thin (10-100 μm), fast (~10⁶ m/s), cold (1000-3000 K), photoionization-driven, high ε (50-150 J/m)
  • Leaders: Thick (1-10 mm), slower (~10³ m/s), hot (5000-20000 K), thermal-ionization-driven, low ε (5-20 J/m)
  • 6-step transition: High E-field → current flows → Joule heating → thermal ionization → leader forms from base → tip launches streamers → fed streamers convert
  • Leader formation requires: Sustained current (not brief pulse) + adequate time (ms range) + sufficient voltage maintenance
  • QCW optimized: 5-20 ms ramps allow full leader development, ε ≈ 5-15 J/m
  • Burst mode limitation: <500 μs pulses too short for leader transition, ε ≈ 30-100+ J/m
  • Efficiency difference: Leaders ~6-10× more efficient than streamers for length extension

Practice

{exercise:phys-ex-06}

Problem 1: Explain why streamers propagate faster than leaders despite being at lower temperature. What fundamental mechanisms are different?

Problem 2: A coil produces 2 m sparks in burst mode (ε = 70 J/m). If converted to QCW with ε = 12 J/m and same total energy, estimate the new spark length. What physical transition enables this improvement?

Problem 3: In the 6-step transition sequence, why does the leader form from the base (topload) first, rather than from the tip? Consider where current density and heating are highest.

Problem 4: High-speed photography shows purple streamers at t = 0.1 ms, then white glow at base by t = 2 ms, then white core extending by t = 10 ms. Which step(s) of the transition correspond to each observation?


Next Lesson: Capacitive Divider Problem