On form and flow in dusty plasmas

Abstract
Microscopic cauliflowers have been observed in a surprisingly diverse range of dusty plasmas. Their microstructure, as analysed by electron microscopy, is consistent with growth by ballistic deposition rather than diffusion limited aggregation. The morphology of the grains supports the inference from dust growth kinetics that they form by accretion of positive ions rather than neutral radicals. The dense, amorphous structure is capped by a fractal surface whose texture is concisely described by a recursion based on the modified midpoint method. The surface texture may be reconstructed by ion bombardment, providing a quantitative link between growth kinetics and roughness through a Mullins-Sekerka stability analysis of Laplacian growth.