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Superfluid flow above the critical velocity

Asaf Paris-Mandoki5. Physikalisches Institut and Center for Integrated Quantum Science and Technology, Universität Stuttgart, 70569, Stuttgart, GermanyJ. ShearringMidlands Ultracold Atom Research Centre, School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, United KingdomFrancesco MancarellaNordic Institute for Theoretical Physics (NORDITA), SE-106 91, Stockholm, SwedenT. M. FromholdMidlands Ultracold Atom Research Centre, School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, United KingdomAndrea TrombettoniCNR-IOM DEMOCRITOS Simulation Center, Via Bonomea 265, I-34136, Trieste, ItalyP. KrügerDepartment of Physics and Astronomy, University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9QH, United Kingdom. [email protected]
2017en
ABI

Аннотация

Superfluidity and superconductivity have been widely studied since the last century in many different contexts ranging from nuclear matter to atomic quantum gases. The rigidity of these systems with respect to external perturbations results in frictionless motion for superfluids and resistance-free electric current flow in superconductors. This peculiar behaviour is lost when external perturbations overcome a critical threshold, i.e. above a critical magnetic field or a critical current for superconductors. In superfluids, such as liquid helium or ultracold gases, the corresponding quantities are a critical rotation rate and a critical velocity respectively. Enhancing the critical values is of great fundamental and practical value. Here we demonstrate that superfluidity can be completely restored for specific, arbitrarily large flow velocities above the critical velocity through quantum interference-induced resonances providing a nonlinear counterpart of the Ramsauer-Townsend effect occurring in ordinary quantum mechanics. We illustrate the robustness of this phenomenon through a thorough analysis in one dimension and prove its generality by showing the persistence of the effect in non-trivial 2d systems. This has far reaching consequences for the fundamental understanding of superfluidity and superconductivity and opens up new application possibilities in quantum metrology, e.g. in rotation sensing.

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