396 research outputs found
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability of AB interface in superfluid 3He
The Kelvin-Helmholtz instability is well-known in classical hydrodynamics,
where it explains the sudden emergence of interfacial surface waves as a
function of the velocity of flow parallel to the interface. It can be carried
over to the inviscid two-fluid dynamics of superfluids, to study different
types of interfaces and phase boundaries in quantum fluids. We report
measurements on the stability of the phase boundary separating the two bulk
phases of superfluid 3He in rotating flow, while the boundary is localized with
the gradient of the magnetic field to a position perpendicular to the rotation
axis. The results demonstrate that the classic stability condition, when
modified for the superfluid environment, is obeyed down to 0.4 Tc, if a large
fraction of the magnetic polarization of the B-phase is attributed to a
parabolic reduction of the interfacial surface tension with increasing magnetic
field.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Thermal Detection of Turbulent and Laminar Dissipation in Vortex Front Motion
We report on direct measurements of the energy dissipated in the spin-up of
the superfluid component of 3He-B. A vortex-free sample is prepared in a
cylindrical container, where the normal component rotates at constant angular
velocity. At a temperature of 0.20Tc, seed vortices are injected into the
system using the shear-flow instability at the interface between 3He-B and
3He-A. These vortices interact and create a turbulent burst, which sets a
propagating vortex front into motion. In the following process, the free energy
stored in the initial vortex-free state is dissipated leading to the emission
of thermal excitations, which we observe with a bolometric measurement. We find
that the turbulent front contains less than the equilibrium number of vortices
and that the superfluid behind the front is partially decoupled from the
reference frame of the container. The final equilibrium state is approached in
the form of a slow laminar spin-up as demonstrated by the slowly decaying tail
of the thermal signal.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Journal of Low Temperature Physic
Microkelvin thermometry with Bose-Einstein condensates of magnons and applications to studies of the AB interface in superfluid He
Coherent precession of trapped Bose-Einstein condensates of magnons is a
sensitive probe for magnetic relaxation processes in superfluid 3He-B down to
the lowest achievable temperatures. We use the dependence of the relaxation
rate on the density of thermal quasiparticles to implement thermometry in 3He-B
at temperatures below 300 K. Unlike popular vibrating wire or quartz
tuning fork based thermometers, magnon condensates allow for contactless
temperature measurement and make possible an independent in situ determination
of the residual zero-temperature relaxation provided by the radiation damping.
We use this magnon-condensate-based thermometry to study the thermal impedance
of the interface between A and B phases of superfluid 3He. The magnon
condensate is also a sensitive probe of the orbital order-parameter texture.
This has allowed us to observe for the first time the non-thermal signature of
the annihilation of two AB interfaces.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, manuscript prepared for EU Microkelvin
Collaboration Workshop 2013. Accepted for publication in Journal of Low
Temperature Physic
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