Abstract

The study of viscous thin film flow has led to the development of highly nonlinear partial differential equationsthat model how the evolution of the film height is affected by different forces. We investigate a model of interaction between surface tension and the thermocapillary Marangoni effect, with a particular focus on the long-time limit. In this limit, the model predicts the creation of an infinite cascade of successively smaller satellite droplets near points where the film thickness vanishes. Motivated by recent progress on the analysis of discrete self-similarity in thin film equations, we compute solutions in a space- and time-rescaled coordinate system. Using this rescaled system we observe the dynamics much further in time than has previously been achieved. The observed behavior is close to, but distinct from, previous observations of discretely self-similar thin film flows, in that the rescaled system does not settle down to a periodic solution, but instead has aspects that continue to evolve monotonically in scaled time. This discovery suggests there are as-yet unexplored ways in which discrete self-similarity may be exhibited.

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