APS March Meeting 2015
Volume 60, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2015;
San Antonio, Texas
Session S53: Invited Session: Symposium on Novel Phenomena in Helium in Reduced Dimensions and Confinement
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Thursday, March 5, 2015
Room: Grand Ballroom C3
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Yoonseok Lee, University of Florida
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.MAR.S53.4
Abstract: S53.00004 : Probing the A-B interface of superfluid helium-3
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Richard Haley
(Lancaster University)
At temperatures around 1 mK helium-3 forms a BCS spin triplet condensate.
The order parameter is sufficiently complex that more than one superfluid
phase exists, each exhibiting a different broken symmetry, and there is a
model first order transition between the two most stable phases, labeled A
and B. The Lancaster Ultra-Low Temperature Group has developed techniques to
probe the properties of the A-B interface in the deep sub-mK regime where
the superfluid is in the pure condensate limit. Shaped and controllable
magnetic fields are used to induce the transition, and to stabilize and move
the A-B phase boundary inside the experimental volume. The latent heat of
the transition has been measured, and the nucleation behavior shown to be
incompatible with conventional thermodynamic models. Since superfluid
helium-3 is inherently pure, and the order parameter transforms continuously
across the A-B interface, it is the most coherent two-dimensional structure
to which we have experimental access. It has been proposed that this 2D
surface in the surrounding 3D bulk volume is a good analog of a cosmological
brane separating two distinct quantum vacuum states; experiments that
simulate brane annihilation and the creation of topological defects have
been carried out at Lancaster. Other investigations have included
measurements of the surface tension and wetting behavior of the interface.
During these studies it was discovered that a large, unpredicted frictional
force was acting on the interface even though it is moving through a pure
superfluid. Recent breakthrough work on the dynamics of the A-B interface
has finally solved this puzzle. Current experiments include a setup where
the interface region is probed directly using quartz tuning fork resonators
that couple to the local density of broken Cooper pair quasiparticle
excitations and thus give insight into the order parameter energy gap
structure as A transforms to B.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.MAR.S53.4