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Probable Discovery
of a New, Supersolid, Phase of Matter
14 January 2004--In
the 15 January 2004 issue of the journal Nature, two physicists
from Penn State University will announce their discovery of a new
phase of matter, a "supersolid" form of helium-4 with
the extraordinary frictionless-flow properties of a superfluid.
"We discovered that solid helium-4 appears to behave like a
superfluid when it is so cold that the laws of quantum mechanics
govern its behavior," says Moses H. W. Chan,
Evan Pugh Professor of Physics at Penn State. "We apparently
have observed, for the first time, a solid material with the characteristics
of a superfluid."
"The possible discovery of a new phase of matter, a supersolid,
is exciting and, if confirmed, would be a significant advance," comments
John Beamish, professor of physics at the University
of Alberta and the author of a review of Chan's discovery published in
the "News and Views" section of Nature. "If the behavior
is confirmed, there are enough questions to be answered about the nature
and properties of supersolid helium to keep both experimentalists and
theorists busy for a long time."
Chan and graduate student Eun-Seong Kim made this discovery
by using an apparatus that allowed them to compress helium-4 gas into
a sponge-like glass disk with miniature atomic-scale pores while cooling
it to almost absolute zero (-459.67 degrees Fahrenheit). The porous glass
was inside a leak-tight capsule, and the helium gas became a solid when
the pressure inside the capsule reached 40 times the normal atmospheric
pressure. Chan and Kim continued to increase the pressure to 62 atmospheres.
They also rotated the experimental capsule back and forth, monitoring
the capsule's rate of oscillation while cooling it to the lowest temperature.
"Something
very unusual occurred when the temperature dropped to one-tenth of a degree
above absolute zero," Chan says. "The oscillation rate suddenly
became slightly more rapid, as if some of the helium had disappeared."
However, Chan and Kim were able to confirm that the helium atoms had not
leaked out of the experimental capsule because its rate of oscillation
returned to normal after they warmed the capsule above one-tenth of a
degree above absolute zero. So they concluded that the solid helium-4
probably had acquired the properties of a superfluid when the conditions
were more extreme.
Chan offers an analogy for understanding the results of this experiment.
"Imagine there is a pan holding a collection of marbles and this
pan with the marbles is suspended by a spring. The pan is then made to
oscillate up and down. The rate of oscillation is determined by the combined
weight of the pan and the marbles. But if a few of the marbles suddenly
become able to hover above the other marbles and the pan, the overall
weight become lighter and the pan would oscillate at a faster rate,"
he explains. The researchers conclude that what happened inside their
experimental capsule is that the tightly packed helium-4 particles became
so slippery that they were no longer coupled to the walls of the glass
sponge's micropores; in other words, it became a supersolid.
Beamish notes that, although superfluids are rare, they "play a
fundamental role in fields as diverse as statistical mechanics and fluid
dynamics and they provide a valuable testbed for applications ranging
from turbulence to cosmology."
Chan says one way to think about the phenomenon of superfluidity is to
imagine that each particle of helium-4 is a person standing on an overcrowded
subway train at rush hour. "The door opens and some of the people
want to move out, but they are packed so tightly together that there is
a lot of friction between them. Under normal conditions, the people who
want to stay on the train will be dragged out along with those who are
pushing to get out the door. But if the packed subway riders somehow became
infinitely slippery, they would flow like a superfluid--each moving person
gliding with ease around those who were standing still," he explains.
In other words, superfluids flow with no friction at all.
To understand how a supersolid could exist, you have to imagine the realm
of quantum mechanics, the modern theory that explains many of the properties
of matter. In this realm there are different rules for the two categories
of particles: fermions and bosons. Fermions include particles like electrons
and atoms with an odd mass number, like helium-3. Bosons include atoms
with an even mass number, like helium-4. The quantum-mechanical rule for
fermions is that they cannot share a quantum state with other particles
of their kind, but for bosons there is no limit to the number that can
be in the identical quantum state. This talent that bosons have for Rockettes-style
coordination leads to the remarkable properties that Chan and Kim discovered
in supercooled helium-4.
"When we go to a low-enough temperature, thermal energy is no longer
important and this quantum-mechanical effect becomes very apparent,"
Chan explains. "In a supersolid of helium-4, its identical helium-4
atoms are flowing around without any friction, rapidly changing places--but
because all its particles are in the identical quantum state, it remains
a solid even though its component particles are continually flowing."
Chan and Kim tested their conclusion by performing the experiment again,
but this time with the fermion helium-3, which theoretically is incapable
of forming a supersolid. In this experiment, they found that there was
no change in the oscillation period, even when the helium-3 was cooled
to just 0.02 degrees above absolute zero--in stark contrast to the results
with helium-4. "This control experiment with helium-3 gives more
weight to our conclusion that the helium-4 in our experiment appears to
have become a supersolid," Chan says.
If Chan's experiment is replicated, it would confirm that all three states
of matter can enter into the "super" state, known as a Bose-Einstein
condensation, in which all the particles have condensed into the same
quantum-mechanical state. The existence of superfluid and "supervapor"
had previously been proven, but theorists had continued to debate about
whether a supersolid was even possible. "One of the most intriguing
predictions of the theory of quantum mechanics is the possibility of superfluid
behavior in a solid-phase material, and now we may have observed this
behavior for the first time," Chan says.
Chan says his lab is interested in learning more about the thermodynamic,
acoustic, and other properties of supersolid helium-4.
This research was supported by the Condensed Matter Physics Program of
the National Science Foundation.
[ B K K ]
CONTACTS:
Moses Chan: (+1)814-863-2622, chan@phys.psu.edu
John R. Beamish: (+1)780-492-5692 or 5286, beamish@phys.ualberta.ca
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): science@psu.edu
or +1-814-863-4682
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