Stirring superfluids
DOI: 10.1063/PT.3.1209
Stirring superfluids. If you chill fermions enough, they can pair up to form bosons and settle into a single collective ground state, a Bose–Einstein condensate. In the case of helium-3 atoms, the resulting BEC is a superfluid that flows without dissipation—provided the flow is not so energetic that it breaks the pairs apart or destroys the ground state’s coherence. Until now, theorists could characterize placid flows in fermionic superfluids, but not the vigorous turbulence that results from shaking or stirring. Aurel Bulgac of the University of Washington in Seattle and his colleagues have adapted density functional theory—a computational approach originally devised to calculate molecular energy levels—and applied its time-dependent extension to model turbulent fermionic superfluids. Although the underlying quantum mechanical equations are straightforward, solving them required the use of one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers, Jaguar at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. In their simulations, Bulgac and his colleagues agitated a fermionic superfluid by shooting spherical projectiles through it or by stirring it with a laser beam. Turbulent superfluids are known to harbor tubes of quantized vorticity. As the figure shows, the simulation could track how two vortex tubes (marked a and b) joined to form a ring, which then opens in a manner reminiscent of the unzipping of a DNA molecule during transcription. Bulgac’s model could help astronomers understand another agitated superfluid: the interior of a rapidly spinning neutron star. For more on quantum turbulence, see PHYSICS TODAY, April 2007, page 43