Friction Found Where There
Should Be None: in Superfluids near Absolute Zero
Physicists atAalto University
have discovered
unexpected friction while rotating superfluid helium
Otaniemi ,
Finland --
February 1, 2018 -- Understanding the causes and effects of the friction could
pave the way for explorations into the composition of neutron stars and our
universe. Here on Earth, the Aalto researchers’ results will be invaluable for
curtailing the production of heat and unwanted glitches in quantum computer components.
Physicists at
unexpected friction while rotating superfluid helium
“For now, we have to study the phenomenon itself more in
depth, before we can have insight exhaustive enough to be applied to
experimental research and developing technologies,” notes Jere Mäkinen,
doctoral researcher at Aalto University.
The researchers have rotated a container filled with
superfluid helium-3 isotopes near absolute zero temperature. The rotating fluid
mimics the motion of solid bodies, creating tiny, identical hurricanes called
vortices.
When the vortices are in stable and ordered laminar motion
at zero temperature, as opposed in endlessly chaotic turbulence, there should
be no friction nor means for a vortex to transfer any kinetic energy to its
surroundings.
Yet that is exactly what Mäkinen and his supervisor, Dr.
Vladimir Eltsov, have now found to happen.
“What we suspect could be a source of the friction are
quasi-particles trapped in the cores of the vortices. When the vortices
accelerate, the particles gain kinetic energy which dissipates to surrounding
particles and creates friction,” explains Mäkinen.
“In turbulent systems, kinetic energy always dissipates from
the motion of vortices, but up to now everyone had thought that when vortices
are in laminar motion the dissipation of energy is zero at zero temperature.
But it turns out, it’s not,” continues Vladimir Eltsov.
Mäkinen compares the dissipation of heat to shaking a box
full of table tennis balls: they gain kinetic energy from the moving box and
the other balls bouncing around.
Preventing the vortices from dissipating heat and therefore
friction, would, for example, enhance the performance of and the ability to
retain data in superconducting components used to construct quantum computers.
A neutron star in a lab – the first step towards
understanding turbulence
The holy grail of studies on quantum turbulence is to
understand and explain turbulence in everyday liquids and gases. The work of
Mäkinen and Eltsov is an initial step towards coming to grips with the inner
workings of vortices in superfluids. From there, one could move on to
comprehending turbulence in our everyday environment, in a ‘classic’ state.
The implications could spin entire industries around. New
ways to improve aerodynamics of planes and vehicles of all kinds or controlling
the flow of oil or gas in pipelines would open up, just to name a few.
Mysteries of the universe are also contained in these
experiments. Collapsed, massively heavy neutron stars are believed to contain
complex superfluid systems. Glitches and abnormalities like sudden changes in
the stars’ rotation speed, could be caused by bursts of vortices and similar
energy dissipation to the one now discovered in the experiments at Aalto University .
J. T. Mäkinen and V. B. Eltsov: ‘Mutual friction in
superfluid 3He−B in the low-temperature regime’ Phys. Rev. B 97, 014527
https://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.97.014527
doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.97.014527
Above text all
unedited from: http://www.aalto.fi/en/current/news/2018-02-01-002/
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