Superfluid vortex dynamics on an infinite cylinder differs significantly from
that on a plane. The requirement that a condensate wave function be single
valued upon once encircling the cylinder means that such a single vortex cannot
remain stationary. Instead, it acquires one of a series of quantized
translational velocities around the circumference, the simplest being ±ℏ/(2MR), with M the mass of the superfluid particles and R the radius
of the cylinder. A generalization to a finite cylinder automatically includes
these quantum-mechanical effects through the pairing of the single vortex and
its image in either the top or bottom end of the surface. The dynamics of a
single vortex on this surface provides a hydrodynamic analog of Laughlin
pumping. The interaction energy for two vortices on an infinite cylinder is
proportional to the classical stream function χ(r12), and it
crosses over from logarithmic to linear when the intervortex separation r12 becomes larger than the cylinder radius. An Appendix summarizes the
connection to an earlier study of Ho and Huang for one or more vortices on an
infinite cylinder. A second Appendix reviews the topologically equivalent
planar annulus, where such quantized vortex motion has no offset, but Laughlin
pumping may be more accessible to experimental observation.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures; published version, with thoroughly revised
Appendice