212 research outputs found
Coexistence of Single and Double-Quantum Vortex Lines
We discuss the configurations in which singly and doubly quantized vortex
lines may coexist in a rotating superfluid. General principles of energy
minimization lead to the conclusion that in equilibrium the two vortex species
segregate within a cylindrical vortex cluster in two coaxial domains where the
singly quantized lines are in the outer annular region. This is confirmed with
simulation calculations on discrete vortex lines. Experimentally the
coexistence can be studied in rotating superfluid He-A. With cw NMR
techniques we find the radial distribution of the two vortex species to depend
on how the cluster is prepared: (i) By cooling through in rotation,
coexistence in the minimum energy configuration is confirmed. (ii) A glassy
agglomerate is formed if one starts with an equilibrium cluster of
single-quantum vortex lines and adds to it sequentially double-quantum lines,
by increasing the rotation velocity in the superfluid state. This proves that
the energy barriers, which separate different cluster configurations, are too
high for metastabilities to anneal.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures; Changed content, 15 pages, 14 figure
Composite defect extends cosmology - 3He analogy
Spin-mass vortices have been observed to form in rotating superfluid 3He-B
following the absorption of a thermal neutron and a rapid transition from the
normal to superfluid state. The spin-mass vortex is a composite defect which
consists of a planar soliton (wall) which terminates on a linear core (string).
This observation fits well within the framework of a cosmological scenario for
defect formation, known as the Kibble-Zurek mechanism. It suggests that in the
early Universe analogous cosmological defects might have formed.Comment: RevTeX file, 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett.,
modified according to referee repor
Nucleation of vortices by rapid thermal quench
We show that vortex nucleation in superfluid He by rapid thermal quench
in the presence of superflow is dominated by a transverse instability of the
moving normal-superfluid interface. Exact expressions for the instability
threshold as a function of supercurrent density and the front velocity are
found. The results are verified by numerical solution of the Ginzburg-Landau
equation.Comment: 4 Pages, 4 Figure, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Vortex Multiplication in Applied Flow: the Precursor to Superfluid Turbulence
The dynamics of quantized vortices in rotating He-B is investigated in
the low density (single-vortex) regime as a function of temperature. An abrupt
transition is observed at . Above this temperature the number of
vortex lines remains constant, as they evolve to their equilibrium positions.
Below this temperature the number of vortices increases linearly in time until
the vortex density has grown sufficiently for turbulence to switch on. On the
basis of numerical calculations we suggest a mechanism responsible for vortex
formation at low temperatures and identify the mutual friction parameter which
governs its abrupt temperature dependence.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; version submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
``Cosmological'' scenario for A-B phase transition in superfluid 3He
At a very rapid superfluid transition in He, follows after a reaction
with single neutron, the creation of topological defects (vortices) has
recently been demonstrated in accordance with the Kibble-Zurek scenario for the
cosmological analogue. We discuss here the extension of the Kibble-Zurek
scenario to the case when alternative symmetries may be broken and different
states nucleated independently. We have calculated the nucleation probability
of the various states of superfluid He during a superfluid transition. Our
results can explain the transition from supercooled phase to the phase,
triggered by nuclear reaction. The new scenario is an alternative to the
well-known ``baked Alaska'' scenario.Comment: RevTex file, 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Defect Formation in Quench-Cooled Superfluid Phase Transition
We use neutron absorption in rotating 3He-B to heat locally a 10
micrometer-size volume into normal phase. When the heated region cools back in
microseconds, vortex lines are formed. We record with NMR the number of lines
as a function of superflow velocity and compare to the Kibble-Zurek theory of
vortex-loop freeze-out from a random network of defects. The measurements
confirm the calculated loop-size distribution and show that also the superfluid
state itself forms as a patchwork of competing A and B phase blobs. This
explains the A to B transition in supercooled neutron-irradiated 3He-A.Comment: RevTex file, 4 pages, 3 figures, resubmitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Evidence for Thermally Activated Spontaneous Fluxoid Formation in Superconducting Thin-Film Rings
We have observed spontaneous fluxoid generation in thin-film rings of the
amorphous superconductor MoSi, cooled through the normal-superconducting
transition, as a function of quench rate and externally applied magnetic field,
using a variable sample temperature scanning SQUID microscope. Our results can
be explained using a model of freezout of thermally activated fluxoids,
mediated by the transport of bulk vortices across the ring walls. This
mechanism is complementary to a mechanism proposed by Kibble and Zurek, which
only relies on causality to produce a freezout of order parameter fluctuations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Defect formation and local gauge invariance
We propose a new mechanism for formation of topological defects in a U(1)
model with a local gauge symmetry. This mechanism leads to definite
predictions, which are qualitatively different from those of the Kibble-Zurek
mechanism of global theories. We confirm these predictions in numerical
simulations, and they can also be tested in superconductor experiments. We
believe that the mechanism generalizes to more complicated theories.Comment: REVTeX, 4 pages, 2 figures. The explicit form of the Hamiltonian and
the equations of motion added. To appear in PRL (http://prl.aps.org/
Critical Velocity of Vortex Nucleation in Rotating Superfluid 3He-A
We have measured the critical velocity v_c at which 3He-A in a rotating
cylinder becomes unstable against the formation of quantized vortex lines with
continuous (singularity-free) core structure. We find that v_c is distributed
between a maximum and minimum limit, which we ascribe to a dependence on the
texture of the orbital angular momentum l(r) in the cylinder. Slow cool down
through T_c in rotation yields l(r) textures for which the measured v_c's are
in good agreement with the calculated instability of the expected l texture.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Dynamic Remanent Vortices in Superfluid 3He-B
We investigate the decay of vortices in a rotating cylindrical sample of
3He-B, after rotation has been stopped. With decreasing temperature vortex
annihilation slows down as the damping in vortex motion, the mutual friction
dissipation \alpha(T), decreases almost exponentially. Remanent vortices then
survive for increasingly long periods, while they move towards annihilation in
zero applied flow. After a waiting period \Delta t at zero flow, rotation is
reapplied and the remnants evolve to rectilinear vortices. By counting these
lines, we measure at temperatures above the transition to turbulence ~0.6T_c
the number of remnants as a function of \alpha(T) and \Delta t. At temperatures
below the transition to turbulence T \lesssim 0.55 T_c, remnants expanding in
applied flow become unstable and generate in a turbulent burst the equilibrium
number of vortices. Here we measure the onset temperature T_on of turbulence as
a function of \Delta t, applied flow velocity, and length of sample L.Comment: Submitted to the proceedings of the Quantum Fluids and Solids
Conference 2006 (to be published in Journal of Low Temperature Physics 2007)
New data are adde
- …