The homogeneous cooling state (HCS) of a granular gas described by the
inelastic Boltzmann equation is reconsidered. As usual, particles are taken as
inelastic hard disks or spheres, but now the coefficient of normal restitution
α is allowed to take negative values α∈[−1,1], a simple way of
modeling more complicated inelastic interactions. The distribution function of
the HCS is studied at the long-time limit, as well as for intermediate times.
At the long-time limit, the relevant information of the HCS is given by a
scaling distribution function ϕs​(c), where the time dependence occurs
through a dimensionless velocity c. For α≳−0.75, ϕs​
remains close to the gaussian distribution in the thermal region, its cumulants
and exponential tails being well described by the first Sonine approximation.
On the contrary, for α≲−0.75, the distribution function becomes
multimodal, its maxima located at cî€ =0, and its observable tails algebraic.
The latter is a consequence of an unbalanced relaxation-dissipation
competition, and is analytically demonstrated for α≃−1 thanks to a
reduction of the Boltzmann equation to a Fokker-Planck-like equation. Finally,
a generalized scaling solution to the Boltzmann equation is also found
ϕ(c,β). Apart from the time dependence occurring through the
dimensionless velocity, ϕ(c,β) depends on time through a new parameter
β measuring the departure of the HCS from its long-time limit. It is
shown that ϕ(c,β) describes the time evolution of the HCS for almost
all times. The relevance of the new scaling is also discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure