We report on experiments performed within the Knudsen boundary layer of a
low-pressure gas. The non-invasive probe we use is a suspended
nano-electro-mechanical string (NEMS), which interacts with 4He gas at
cryogenic temperatures. When the pressure P is decreased, a reduction of the
damping force below molecular friction ∝P had been first reported in
Phys. Rev. Lett. Vol 113, 136101 (2014) and never reproduced since. We
demonstrate that this effect is independent of geometry, but dependent on
temperature. Within the framework of kinetic theory, this reduction is
interpreted as a rarefaction phenomenon, carried through the boundary layer by
a deviation from the usual Maxwell-Boltzmann equilibrium distribution induced
by surface scattering. Adsorbed atoms are shown to play a key role in the
process, which explains why room temperature data fail to reproduce it.Comment: Article plus supplementary materia