scholarly journals Critical Superfluid Velocity in a Trapped Dipolar Gas

2010 ◽  
Vol 104 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan M. Wilson ◽  
Shai Ronen ◽  
John L. Bohn
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. e1400222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre-François Duc ◽  
Michel Savard ◽  
Matei Petrescu ◽  
Bernd Rosenow ◽  
Adrian Del Maestro ◽  
...  

In one of the most celebrated examples of the theory of universal critical phenomena, the phase transition to the superfluid state of 4He belongs to the same three-dimensional (3D) O(2) universality class as the onset of ferromagnetism in a lattice of classical spins with XY symmetry. Below the transition, the superfluid density ρs and superfluid velocity vs increase as a power law of temperature described by a universal critical exponent that is constrained to be identical by scale invariance. As the dimensionality is reduced toward 1D, it is expected that enhanced thermal and quantum fluctuations preclude long-range order, thereby inhibiting superfluidity. We have measured the flow rate of liquid helium and deduced its superfluid velocity in a capillary flow experiment occurring in single 30-nm-long nanopores with radii ranging down from 20 to 3 nm. As the pore size is reduced toward the 1D limit, we observe the following: (i) a suppression of the pressure dependence of the superfluid velocity; (ii) a temperature dependence of vs that surprisingly can be well-fitted by a power law with a single exponent over a broad range of temperatures; and (iii) decreasing critical velocities as a function of decreasing radius for channel sizes below R ≃ 20 nm, in stark contrast with what is observed in micrometer-sized channels. We interpret these deviations from bulk behavior as signaling the crossover to a quasi-1D state, whereby the size of a critical topological defect is cut off by the channel radius.


Motivated by the recent discovery that the thickness of a helium film is independent of its state of superflow, we have analysed the conditions under which the two fluid model is consistent with equilibrium between film and vapour. The experimental result is found to be a natural consequence of the requirements for equilibrium. In addition we find that waves in a moving film should be convected at approximately 1/2(p s lp) u s , where u s is the superfluid velocity. A new criterion for critical velocity is discovered and a new result is obtained for the attenuation of waves.


The problem of heat transfer at a wall bounding a half-space ( z > 0) containing liquid helium II is considered. The helium is modelled as a two-fluid continuum (after Landau & Lifshitz) with both relaxation and healing terms incorporated into the governing equations. The heat transfer is taken to be small so that the problem can be treated as the perturbation of the equilibrium state (i. e. at zero heat transfer). It is shown that if the relaxation coefficient varies as (superfluid density) - m (1 > m ≽ 1/2) then the superfluid velocity behaves like cz 2 m -1 as z → 0. The constant c can be obtained by invoking a scaling property of the full equations. It is found that the healing parameter can be scaled out of the full equations although c can be found explicitly for small healing: c , and the related temperature at the wall, are therefore known for all values of the healing coefficient. These results reduce to those obtained by Clark (1963) when healing and relaxation are ignored.


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