Blooming Phase (Electrostatic Mesophase Expansion Regime) The blooming phase describes the transition of a low-density fibrous material into an expanded, self-separating morphology under reduced gravitational suppression, where weak electrostatic interactions become mechanically dominant over settling forces. In this regime: fibers no longer collapse into compact packing states, local charge asymmetries propagate through the network, and the material undergoes volumetric expansion through distributed repulsive coupling. The result is a visible “blooming” behavior: strands fan outward, filament bundles decohere, internal spacing increases, and the structure transitions from gravity-compressed to electrostatically structured. Unlike rigid-body expansion, the blooming phase is: anisotropic, morphology-dependent, and dynamically metastable. The effect is amplified in: high surface-area materials, triboelectrically active fibers, low-density plush structures, and microgravity environments where gravitational compression no longer masks weak-field interactions. Mechanistically, the blooming phase emerges from: distributed dielectric polarization, localized charge retention, fiber-orientation coupling, and nonlinear rheological relaxation. Importantly, the phenomenon is not magnetic ordering, but a form of: soft electrostatic structural ordering under reduced gravitational dominance. Observable signatures may include: spontaneous volumetric fluffing, persistent filament separation, oscillatory reconfiguration, charge-mediated stiffness increase, and delayed settling/re-collapse after perturbation. In practical terms: gravity stops winning,electrostatic morphology starts expressing itself,and the material “blooms” into the interaction field it was already carrying internally.
Nicky Joseph Hubertus Catharina Hacquier (Sun,) studied this question.
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