Author
Lacey, A
Hennessy, M
Harvey, P
Katz, R
Journal title
European Journal of Applied Mathematics
DOI
10.1017/S095679251500042X
Issue
05
Volume
26
Last updated
2024-04-09T21:29:34.87+01:00
Page
615-645
Abstract
The superheating that usually occurs when a solid is melted by volumetric heating can produce irregular solid–liquid interfaces. Such interfaces can be visualised in ice, where they are sometimes known as Tyndall stars. This paper describes some of the experimental observations of Tyndall stars and a mathematical model for the early stages of their evolution. The modelling is complicated by the strong crystalline anisotropy, which results in an anisotropic kinetic undercooling at the interface; it leads to an interesting class of free boundary problems that treat the melt region as infinitesimally thin.
Symplectic ID
503537
Favourite
Off
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
12 Aug 2015
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Created on 16 Jan 2015 - 09:00.