2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session U5: Low Temperature Physics, A Historical Perspective
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Thursday, March 16, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 309
Sponsoring
Unit:
FHP
Chair: George O. Zimmerman, Boston University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.U5.4
Abstract: U5.00004 : Liquid Helium 3 and Solid Helium at Yale and Beyond
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
D.M. Lee
(Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell University)
Many of the foundations of low temperature physics in the latter
half of the twentieth century were built at Yale University under
the leadership of Professor Cecil T. Lane who came to Yale in
1932 and Henry A. Fairbank who obtained his Ph.D. at Yale in 1944
under Lane's guidance. This discussion will mainly treat the
contributions of Henry Fairbank and his students during the
period between 1954 and 1963, when Henry Fairbank left Yale to
become chairman of the Physics Dept. at Duke University.
Following World War II small amounts of helium three became
available to low temperature experimenters. Henry Fairbank’s
graduate students were provided with the opportunity to
investigate second sound in dilute and later concentrated
mixtures of helium three in superfluid helium four. These
measurements showed strong effects of the phase separation in
helium 3 - helium 4 mixtures previously discovered in the
laboratory of William Fairbank (a student of Lane and a brother
of Henry Fairbank). As more helium three became available,
studies of pure helium three were performed, including
measurements of the thermal conductivity, the density and the
specific heat. Early evidence for the melting curve minimum was
found. The main emphasis in this work was to search for Fermi
liquid behavior. Much of the later work in this area was
performed by the group of John Wheatley at the University of
Illinois. In studies of solid helium four at Yale, a surprising
observation was made. Hitherto it had been thought that hcp was
the stable phase throughout the low temperature part of the phase
diagram. It was found via ultrasound experiments that a small
silver of bcc solid existed at the lowest pressures. While this
author was a graduate student at Yale, Henry Fairbank pointed out
to him the possibility of cooling helium three via adiabatic
compression from the liquid into the solid phase. (Pomeranchuk
Cooling). A brief discussion is given of the use of this
technique in the discovery of superfluid helium 3 by Osheroff,
Richardson and the author at Cornell.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.U5.4