Vortices are the hallmarks of hydrodynamic flow. Recent studies indicate that
strongly-interacting electrons in ultrapure conductors can display signatures
of hydrodynamic behavior including negative nonlocal resistance, Poiseuille
flow in narrow channels, and a violation of the Wiedemann-Franz law. Here we
provide the first visualization of whirlpools in an electron fluid. By
utilizing a nanoscale scanning superconducting quantum interference device on a
tip (SQUID-on-tip) we image the current distribution in a circular chamber
connected through a small aperture to an adjacent narrow current carrying strip
in high-purity type-II Weyl semimetal WTe2. In this geometry, the Gurzhi
momentum diffusion length and the size of the aperture determine the vortex
stability phase diagram. We find that the vortices are present only for small
apertures, whereas the flow is laminar (non-vortical) for larger apertures,
consistent with the theoretical analysis of the hydrodynamic regime and in
contrast to the expectations of ballistic transport in WTe2 at low
temperatures. Moreover, near the vortical-to-laminar transition, we observe a
single vortex in the chamber splitting into two vortices, a behavior that can
occur only in the hydrodynamic regime and cannot be sustained by ballistic
transport. These findings suggest a novel mechanism of hydrodynamic flow:
instead of the commonly considered electron-electron scattering at the bulk,
which becomes extremely weak at low temperatures, the spatial diffusion of
charge carriers' momenta is enabled by small-angle scattering at the planar
surfaces of thin pure crystals. This surface-induced para-hydrodynamics opens
new avenues for exploring and utilizing electron fluidics in high-mobility
electron systems.Comment: Main text: 15 pages, 5 figures. Method: 18 pages, 9 Extended Data
figures. Supplementary videos: