Scattering theory of walking droplets in the presence of obstacles
Rémy Dubertrand (Université de Liège, Belgique)
Walking droplets that are sustained on the surface of a vibrating liquid, have attracted considerable attention during the past decade due to their remarkable analogy with quantum wave-particle duality. This was initiated by the pioneering experiment by Y. Couder and E. Fort in 2006, which reported the observation of a diffraction pattern in the angular resolved profile of droplets that propagated across a single slit obstacle geometry. While the occurrence of this wave-like phenomenon can be qualitatively traced back to the coupling of the droplet with its associated surface wave, a quantitative framework for the description of the surface-wave-propelled motion of the droplet in the presence of confining boundaries and obstacles still represents a major challenge. This problem is all the more stimulating as several experiments have already reported clear effects of the geometry on the dynamics of walking droplets.
Here we present a simple model inspired from quantum mechanics for the dynamics of a walking droplet in an arbitrary geometry. We propose to describe its trajectory using a Green function approach. The Green function is related to the Helmholtz equation with Neumann boundary conditions on the obstacle(s) and outgoing conditions at infinity.
For a single slit geometry our model is exactly solvable and reproduces some of the features observed experimentally. It stands for a promising candidate to account for the presence of boundaries in the walker’s dynamics.