62 research outputs found

    Simultaneous Measurements of the Torsional Oscillator Anomaly and Thermal Conductivity in Solid 4He

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    In these torsional oscillator experiments the samples of solid 4^4He were characterized by measuring their thermal conducitvity. Polycrystalline samples of helium of either high isotopic purity or natural concentration of 3^3He were grown in an annular container by the blocked-capillary method and investigated before and after annealing. No correlation has been found between the magnitude of the low-temperature shift of the torsional oscillator frequency and the amount of crystalline defects as measured by the thermal conductivity. In samples with the natural 3^3He concentration a substantial excess thermal conductivity over the usual T3T^3 dependence was observed below 120 mK.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    On the low-temperature anomalies in the thermal conductivity of plastically deformed crystals due to phonon-kink scattering

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    Previous experimental studies of the thermal conductivity of plastically deformed lead crystals in the superconducting state have shown strong anomalies in the thermal conductivity. Similar effects were also found for the thermal conductivity of bent 4He{}^4\text{He} samples. Until now, a theoretical explanation for these results was missing. In this paper we will introduce the process of phonon-kink scattering and show that it qualitatively explains the anomalies that experiments had found.Comment: 3 pages, follow-up paper to appear soo

    Nanotube-based source of charges for experiments with solid helium at low temperatures

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    Methods of preparation of the field-emission sources of charges from carbon nanotubes suitable for study of injected charges in solid helium at low temperatures T < 1 K are presented. The sources have been prepared by arc discharge deposition of nanotubes onto a flat copper substrate or by mechanical rubbing of nanotubes into porous metal surface. The test study of the voltage-current characteristics of a diode cell with the nanotube source in superfluid He II have shown that at voltages above 120 V one can observe a relatively large current I ≥ 10⁻¹³ A of negative charges in liquid helium. The field and temperature dependences of positive and negative currents in solid ⁴He were studied in samples grown by the blocked capillary technique. Usage of the nanotube based source of injected charges had permitted us for the first time to observe motion of the positive charges in solid helium at temperatures below 0.1 К. The current-voltage dependence could be described by a power law I ~ Uα, with the value of the exponent α >> 2, much higher than what one would expect for the regime of space charge limited currents

    Observation of acoustic turbulence in a system of nonlinear second sound waves in superfluid 4He.

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    We discuss the results of recent studies of acoustic turbulence in a system of nonlinear second sound waves in a high-quality resonator filled with superfluid 4He. It was found that, when the driving amplitude was sufficiently increased, a steady-state direct wave cascade is formed involving a flux of energy towards high frequencies. The wave amplitude distribution follows a power law over a wide range of frequencies. Development of a decay instability at high driving amplitudes results in the formation of subharmonics of the driving frequency, and to a backflow of energy towards the low-frequency spectral domain, in addition to the direct cascade

    Supersolid Helium at High Pressure

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    We have measured the pressure dependence of the supersolid fraction by a torsional oscillator technique. Superflow is found from 25.6 bar up to 136.9 bar. The supersolid fraction in the low temperature limit increases from 0.6 % at 25.6 bar near the melting boundary up to a maximum of 1.5% near 55 bar before showing a monotonic decrease with pressure extrapolating to zero near 170 bar.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Decay of capillary turbulence on the surface of a semiquantum liquid

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    We study the free decay of capillary turbulence on the charged surface of liquid hydrogen. Contrary to expectations based on the existing self-similar theory of nonstationary wave turbulent processes in ideal liquid, we find that decay begins from the high frequency end of the spectral range, while most of the energy remains localized at low frequencies. We show that finite damping of the waves changes qualitatively the character of the turbulent decay. Numerical calculations based on this idea agree well with the experimental data

    Decay of the turbulent cascade of capillary waves on the charged surface of liquid hyrdrogen.

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    We study the free decay of capillary turbulence on the charged surface of liquid hydrogen. We find that the decay begins from the high frequency spectral domains of the surface oscillations and is of a quasi-adiabatic character. The characteristic relaxation time of the whole turbulent cascade is close to the viscous damping time for capillary waves of frequency equal to the driving frequency

    Experiments on wave turbulence : the evolution and growth of second sound acoustic turbulence in superfluid 4He confirm self-similarity.

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    We report our experiments on the formation of second sound acoustic turbulence in superfluid 4He. The initial growth in spectral amplitude follows power laws that steepen rapidly with increasing harmonic number n, corresponding to a propagating front in frequency space. The lower growth exponents agree well with analytic predictions and numerical modeling. The observed increase in the formation delay with n validates the concept of selfsimilarity in the growth of wave turbulence

    Observation of an Inverse Energy Cascade in Developed Acoustic Turbulence in Superfluid Helium

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    We report observation of an inverse energy cascade in second sound acoustic turbulence in He II. Its onset occurs above a critical driving energy and it is accompanied by giant waves that constitute an acoustic analogue of the rogue waves that occasionally appear on the surface of the ocean. The theory of the phenomenon is developed and shown to be in good agreement with the experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. The final version just prior to publicatio
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