Abstract

Results are presented from experimental studies of the conversion of a steady-state negative corona into a spark. It is found that a spark in a negative corona in nitrogen and air is formed in the absence of fast primary streamers. It is shown that, in atmospheric-pressure nitrogen, the conversion of a corona into a spark begins with the propagation of a plasma channel (secondary streamer) from the point electrode (cathode) to the plane electrode (anode). In contrast, the plasma channel in air originates near the plane electrode and then propagates towards the point electrode. The propagation velocity of the secondary streamer is very low, V=103–104 cm/s. Two possible scenarios of the formation of the spark channel in a negative corona in nitrogen are described on the basis of the concept of a contracted volume glow discharge. Results are presented from time-resolved spectral measurements of plasma emission from different regions of the corona during its transformation into a spark.

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