scholarly journals Density Fluctuations across the Superfluid-Supersolid Phase Transition in a Dipolar Quantum Gas

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hertkorn ◽  
J.-N. Schmidt ◽  
F. Böttcher ◽  
M. Guo ◽  
M. Schmidt ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Baillie ◽  
R. N. Bisset ◽  
P. B. Blakie

Gels ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 7
Author(s):  
Gerald S. Manning

The physical principle underlying the familiar condensation transition from vapor to liquid is the competition between the energetic tendency to condense owing to attractive forces among molecules of the fluid and the entropic tendency to disperse toward the maximum volume available as limited only by the walls of the container. Van der Waals incorporated this principle into his equation of state and was thus able to explain the discontinuous nature of condensation as the result of instability of intermediate states. The volume phase transition of gels, also discontinuous in its sharpest manifestation, can be understood similarly, as a competition between net free energy attraction of polymer segments and purely entropic dissolution into a maximum allowed volume. Viewed in this way, the gel phase transition would require nothing more to describe it than van der Waals’ original equation of state (with osmotic pressure Π replacing pressure P). But the polymer segments in a gel are networked by cross-links, and a consequent restoring force prevents complete dissolution. Like a solid material, and unlike a van der Waals fluid, a fully swollen gel possesses an intrinsic volume of its own. Although all thermodynamic descriptions of gel behavior contain an elastic component, frequently in the form of Flory-style rubber theory, the resulting isotherms usually have the same general appearance as van der Waals isotherms for fluids, so it is not clear whether the solid-like aspect of gels, that is, their intrinsic volume and shape, adds any fundamental physics to the volume phase transition of gels beyond what van der Waals already knew. To address this question, we have constructed a universal chemical potential for gels that captures the volume transition while containing no quantities specific to any particular gel. In this sense, it is analogous to the van der Waals theory of fluids in its universal form, but although it incorporates the van der Waals universal equation of state, it also contains a network elasticity component, not based on Flory theory but instead on a nonlinear Langevin model, that restricts the radius of a fully swollen spherical gel to a solid-like finite universal value of unity, transitioning to a value less than unity when the gel collapses. A new family of isotherms arises, not present in a preponderately van der Waals analysis, namely, profiles of gel density as a function of location in the gel. There is an abrupt onset of large amplitude density fluctuations in the gel at a critical temperature. Then, at a second critical temperature, the entire swollen gel collapses to a high-density phase.


2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (26) ◽  
pp. 4851-4868 ◽  
Author(s):  
BISWANATH LAYEK ◽  
SOMA SANYAL ◽  
AJIT M. SRIVASTAVA

We consider the presence of cosmic string induced density fluctuations in the universe at temperatures below the electroweak phase transition temperature. Resulting temperature fluctuations can restore the electroweak symmetry locally, depending on the amplitude of fluctuations and the background temperature. The symmetry will be spontaneously broken again in a given fluctuation region as the temperature drops there (for fluctuations with length scales smaller than the horizon), resulting in the production of baryon asymmetry. The time scale of the transition will be governed by the wavelength of fluctuation and, hence, can be much smaller than the Hubble time. This leads to strong enhancement in the production of baryon asymmetry for a second order electroweak phase transition as compared to the case when transition happens due to the cooling of the universe via expansion. For a two-Higgs extension of the Standard Model (with appropriate CP violation), we show that one can get the required baryon to entropy ratio if fluctuations propagate without getting significantly damped. If fluctuations are damped rapidly, then a volume factor suppresses the baryon production. Still, the short scale of the fluctuation leads to enhancement of the baryon to entropy ratio by at least 3–4 orders of magnitude compared to the conventional case of second order transition where the cooling happens due to expansion of the universe.


2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 377-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji-Xuan Hou ◽  
Li-Ming Si ◽  
Da-Bao Yang

2019 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ayako Nitta ◽  
Takeshi Morita ◽  
Hiroyuki Ohno ◽  
Keiko Nishikawa

Aqueous solutions of ionic liquids have unique mixing states. Fluctuations are useful for understanding the inhomogeneity of the mixing states. In this study, an aqueous solution of tetrabutylphosphonium trifluoroacetate, ([P4,4,4,4]CF3COO), which exhibits a lower-critical-solution-temperature-type phase transition, was investigated. Focussing on the concentration and temperature range near the critical point, the fluctuations were evaluated by combining three kinds of experimentally obtained data: small-angle X-ray scattering intensity, partial molar volumes, and isothermal compressibility. Using Kirkwood–Buff integrals, individual density fluctuations of water and [P4,4,4,4]CF3COO were calculated, and these suggested that a large number of water molecules hydrated [P4,4,4,4]CF3COO ion pairs, and the hydrated ion pairs aggregated near the critical point. The relationship between the mesoscopic fluctuations and the macroscopic phase transition was clarified by drawing counter maps of the fluctuations in the phase diagrams.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 442-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Chomaz ◽  
R. M. W. van Bijnen ◽  
D. Petter ◽  
G. Faraoni ◽  
S. Baier ◽  
...  

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