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We report a peculiar dynamic phenomenon in granular gases, chain structures of head-on collisions caused by the boundary heated mechanism form a network in an Airbus micro-gravity experiment and horizontal vibrated one in the laboratory, which differ markedly from the grazing-collision-dominant in randomly driven granular fluid. This new order property is an orientation correlation between the relative position and the relative velocity of any particle pair, which weakens the collision frequency and leads a long range boundary effect. By the histogram of the relative position and the relative velocity, we find this position-velocity correlation is not only at limits of very small relative velocities but also large ones, which means the breakdown of molecular chaos assumption is not limited to a small portion of the phase space. Through a simple anisotropic angular distribution model of the relative position and the relative velocity, we could modify classical uniform angular integration results of mean field values taking the effect of the observed collision chain structure explicitly into account.
When a rod is vertically withdrawn from a granular layer, oblique force chains can be developed by effective shearing. In this study, the force-chain structure in a rod-withdrawn granular layer was experimentally investigated using a photoelastic tec
The granular gas is a paradigm for understanding the effects of inelastic interactions in granular materials. Kinetic theory provides a general theoretical framework for describing the granular gas. Its central result is that the tail of the velocity
The expansion of the velocity distribution function for the homogeneous cooling state (HCS) in a Sonine polynomial series around a Maxwellian is shown to be divergent, though Borel resummable. A convergent expansion for the HCS has been devised and e
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A highly polydisperse granular gas is modeled by a continuous distribution of particle sizes, a, giving rise to a corresponding continuous temperature profile, T(a), which we compute approximately, generalizing previous results for binary or multicom