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Open Quantum Systems Decoherence
Quantum Simulation
Quantum Chemistry
Visualization study of counterflow in superfluid helium-4 using metastable helium molecules
arXiv
Authors: Wei Guo, Sidney B. Cahn, James A. Nikkel, William F. Vinen, Daniel N. McKinsey
Year
2010
Paper ID
8914
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
164
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Heat is carried in superfluid He-4 by the motion of the normal fluid1, a counterflowing superfluid component serving to eliminate any net mass flow. It has been known for many years that above a critical heat current the superfluid component in this counterflow becomes turbulent. This turbulence takes the form of a disorganized tangle of quantized vortex lines and is maintained by the relative motion of the two fluids2-3. It has been suspected that the normal fluid may also become turbulent4, but experimental verification is difficult without a technique for visualizing the flow. Here we report a series of visualization studies on the normal-fluid component in a thermal counterflow performed by imaging the motion of seeded metastable helium molecules using a laser-induced-fluorescence technique5-8. We present evidence that the flow of the normal fluid is indeed turbulent, at least at relatively large velocities. Thermal counterflow in which both components are turbulent presents us with a new and theoretically challenging type of turbulent behaviour.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Heat is carried in superfluid He-4 by the motion of the normal fluid^1, a counterflowing superfluid component serving to eliminate any net mass flow.
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