If helium is 'superfluid' at low temperatures

In summary, it appears that helium may be a 'superfluid' at low temperatures, which could lead to the assumption that amorphous solids (superviscous) are 'superviscous'. However, the properties of a superviscous amorphos solid are still unknown, and there are significant differences between the conductor-superinsulator transition and the normal-superconductivity transition.
  • #1
granpa
2,268
7
if helium is 'superfluid' at low temperatures then is it correct to think of amorphous solids as 'superviscous'?
 
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  • #2


Sounds clever, regard with suspicion...
 
  • #3


granpa said:
if helium is 'superfluid' at low temperatures then is it correct to think of amorphous solids as 'superviscous'?

What would be the properties of a superviscous amorphos soild?
 
  • #4


granpa said:
if helium is 'superfluid' at low temperatures then is it correct to think of amorphous solids as 'superviscous'?

Superfluidity is a quantum effect, where the glass transition is a classical effect, as far as I know.
 
  • #6


granpa said:

I am not sure why you think superinsulators have anything to do with this; they are essentially just grainy films where the charging energy of single grains are larger than the availalble thermal energy which means that the charge carriers "freeze out" at low temperatures (it is a bit more complictated than this, since there are some collective effects involved, but that is the essence of it); it is essentially a classical effect and there is no macroscopic coherence involved.

And yes, I do know that the Novosibirsk people like to say that that the conductor-superinsulator transition is analogous to the normal-superconductivity transition; but there are significant differences.
 
  • #9


granpa said:
according to the wikipedia article superinsulators are the result of cooper pairs and the effect can be destroyed by magnetic fields.

also see:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v452/n7187/abs/nature06837.html

Well, the Wikipedia article isn't very accurate in this case. It is true that the effect is observed when the grains are superconducting; but this does not change what I wrote above. If you want you can think of the system as a network of Cooper pair boxes (which is why you need the grains to be superconducting); but the interaction between these are -as far as I know- still just classical (there is a synchronization of the phase BETWEEN the grains; but there is still no GLOBAL phase; the system is not described by a "single wavefunction").
Note that the idea is far from new and as far as I remember there is even a brief discussion in Tinkham.

I am familiar with the article, and I've also attended a few talks by among others Baturina so hopefully I have some idea about how this work (at one point we were considering using superinsulators in one of our own projects).
 
  • #10


now there is something called 'superglass'.

http://www.nanowerk.com/news/newsid=10389.php

Although the theory that frozen helium might be a supersolid has been around for years, the first evidence that it was at least a super-something was provided in a 2004 experiment by Moses Chan at Penn State. Researchers there placed a tiny cylinder of frozen helium in a torsion oscillator, which rotates rapidly forward and back, like a washing machine agitator. The resonant frequency of the oscillator -- the one it naturally settles into -- depends on the mass it's trying to move around and back. The researchers found that below a critical temperature, some of the mass of the (solid) helium seemed to disappear.
 
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  • #11


http://209.85.173.132/search?q=cach...%"&cd=12&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us&client=firefox-a
Physicists in the US have shown that a supposed quantum phase of matter known as a "supersolid" is strongly dependent on the amount of crystal disorder present in the sample being studied. By performing experiments on samples of helium-4 with large amounts of disorder, they found that the trademark effects of supersolidity in the samples rose to more than 20% -- by far the largest proportion seen so far.
 
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  • #12


wikipedia:
Helium II is a superfluid, a quantum-mechanical state of matter with strange properties. For example, when it flows through even capillaries of 10-7 to 10-8 m width it has no measurable viscosity. However, when measurements were done between two moving discs, a viscosity comparable to that of gaseous helium was observed (which is still pretty small for a fluid). Current theory explains this using the two-fluid model for Helium II. In this model, liquid helium below the lambda point is viewed as containing a proportion of helium atoms in a ground state, which are superfluid and flow with exactly zero viscosity, and a proportion of helium atoms in an excited state, which behave more like an ordinary fluid.
2 components? one that flows with exactly zero viscosity and one that doesnt. sounds kinda like a supersolid, doesn't it? https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2206263&postcount=7
granpa said:
I think that most people would agree that the electron doesn't really spin. it just behaves as though it did. I'm thinking that the supercurrent is like that. the cooper pairs don't (necessarily) move. they just behave as though they did.
maybe superflow (the component that flows with exactly zero viscosity) isn't 'real' either. in the sense of not consisting of the real flow of real atoms. the atoms somehow just behave as though they were flowing. (of course, the real atoms of the superfluid can and do really flow but that would be the component that does not flow with zero viscosity. the viscosity is unusually small though). somehow momentum 'flows' around the interior of the superfluid without the atoms (necessarily) moving. obviously this would be a purely quantum mechanical phenomenon. this would explain supersolids too.

also:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superfluid
A more fundamental property than the disappearance of viscosity becomes visible if superfluid is placed in a rotating container. Instead of rotating uniformly with the container, the rotating state consists of quantized vortices. That is, when the container is rotated at speed below the first critical velocity (related to the quantum numbers for the element in question)(its the speed of sound in the superfluid) the liquid remains perfectly stationary.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_moment
The London moment is a quantum-mechanical phenomenon whereby a spinning superconductor generates a magnetic field whose axis lines up exactly with the spin axis. The term may also refer to the magnetic moment of any rotation of any superconductor, caused by the electrons lagging behind the rotation of the object.
in other words the electrons (or rather cooper pairs) are stationary.
compare that to:
http://www.nanowerk.com/news/newsid=10389.php
Although the theory that frozen helium might be a supersolid has been around for years, the first evidence that it was at least a super-something was provided in a 2004 experiment by Moses Chan at Penn State. Researchers there placed a tiny cylinder of frozen helium in a torsion oscillator, which rotates rapidly forward and back, like a washing machine agitator. The resonant frequency of the oscillator -- the one it naturally settles into -- depends on the mass it's trying to move around and back. The researchers found that below a critical temperature, some of the mass of the (solid) helium seemed to disappear.
I suspect that all of this might somehow be related to the concept of 'effective mass' where a particle (in the interior of some material) behaves as though it had less mass than we know it really does.

finally:

Application of heat to a spot in superfluid helium results in a wave of heat conduction at the relatively high velocity of 20 m/s, called second sound.
 
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  • #13


No offense, but your post makes no sense at all.
If you don't believe superfluidity involved "real movement" you should check out some of the videos of superfluids on Youtube or -even better- find a nearby university that holds public demonstrations where effects like superfluid helium "creeping out" of a container (via the Rollin film) are shown. I used to supervise a demonstration of superfluidity to undergraduate students, it is quite a nice demonstration and most of the effects are quite easy to see.

Note also that there are quite a few engineering applications where this is used; one way to separate He-3 and superfluid He-4 is to use a "superleak"; basically a barriers with holes so small that only superfluids can pass through (and once you heat up the He-4 it becomes a normal liquid again). This is used in e.g. dilution refrigerators.

Also, you shouldn't take the London theory too seriously. It is a phenomenological theory which is often useful but it doesn't even try to describe what goes on at the microscopic level, for that you need more sophisticated theories based on QM.
 
  • #14


what are you talking about?

(of course, real atoms can and do really flow but it wouldn't be with zero viscosity. the viscosity might be pretty small though)

the article says that superfluid helium behaves as though it has 2 ocmponents. the real atoms would be the second component. the component that flows with little but not zero viscosity.edit:I have editted my post below to make its meaning more plain.
 
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  • #15

FAQ: If helium is 'superfluid' at low temperatures

1.

What is a superfluid?

A superfluid is a state of matter that exhibits zero viscosity, meaning it has no resistance to flow. This allows it to flow without any loss of energy.

2.

Why is helium considered a superfluid at low temperatures?

Helium is considered a superfluid at low temperatures because its atoms are in a highly ordered state, causing them to act as a single entity and flow without resistance.

3.

What happens to helium as it reaches superfluid temperatures?

As helium reaches superfluid temperatures, it undergoes a phase transition from a normal fluid to a superfluid. This is due to a change in the behavior of its atoms at the quantum level.

4.

What are some properties of superfluid helium?

Superfluid helium exhibits some unique properties, such as zero viscosity, the ability to climb up and out of containers, and the ability to flow through tiny pores and channels without any loss of energy.

5.

How is superfluid helium used in scientific research?

Superfluid helium is used in a variety of scientific research, such as studying quantum phenomena, creating ultra-cold temperatures for experiments, and developing high-precision instruments such as gyroscopes and accelerometers.

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