Two-dimensional flow past an infinitely long cylinder of nanoscopic radius in
superfluid He-4 at zero temperature is studied by time-dependent density
functional theory. The calculations reveal two distinct critical phenomena for
the onset of dissipation: 1) vortex-antivortex pair shedding from the periphery
of the moving cylinder and 2) appearance of cavitation in the wake, which
possesses similar geometry as observed experimentally for fast moving
micrometer-scale particles in superfluid He-4. Vortex pairs with the same
circulation are occasionally emitted in the form of dimers, which constitute
the building blocks for the Benard-von Karman vortex street structure observed
in classical turbulent fluids and Bose-Einstein condensates. The cavitation
induced dissipation mechanism should be common to all superfluids that are
self-bound and have a finite surface tension, which include the recently
discovered self-bound droplets in ultracold Bose gases.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure