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Phenomenon observed in superfluid helium-3
IN THE quantum world, waves can act like particles and particles
like waves, interfering like overlapping ripples in a pond. Now,
physicists at the University of California, Berkeley, have shown
that this same quantum interference occurs between two samples of
superfluid helium-3, a liquid so cold, a thousandth of a degree
above absolute zero - that it flows without resistance. One
potential application of this quantum interference is in an
ultrasensitive superfluid gyroscope.
"The successful demonstration of this effect may enable
scientists to measure extremely slight increases or decreases in
the rotation of objects, including Earth," said Richard E.
Packard, UC Berkeley professor of physics. "This device could
even be used to establish an absolute state of rest."
"Our experiment was a proof of principle, but if we can reduce
the noise enough and build a much larger version of the device,
it is conceivable that we could make a sensor to monitor small
changes in the Earth's rotation he said. The team reports their
findings in the journal Nature. This quantum interference is
identical to the interference between light waves, electrons,
atomic beams and electrical currents in solid superconductors. It
had never before been observed in a liquid.
The physicists demonstrated quantum interference by building the
first superfluid equivalent of a superconducting quantum
interference device, called a dc-SQUID, the most sensitive
detector of magnetic fields today. Just as superconducting dc-
SQUIDs can measure minuscule magnetic fields, such as magnetic
emanations from the brain, a superfluid SQUID can detect changes
in rotation, analogous to a gyroscope.
In addition to monitoring the Earth's rotation, a superfluid
gyroscope also could be used to test predictions from Einstein's
general theory of relativity, such as how spinning objects move
in a gravitational field. Four years ago, Davis, Packard and
their colleagues demonstrated one of the basic components of the
superfluid SQUID - a superfluid Josephson junction, analogous to
the Josephson junctions in superconductors. In superconductors, a
thin insulator between two superconductors at different voltages
generates a microwave oscillation in the junction. This is in
contrast to a classical circuit, where current flows in only one
direction - from high to low voltage.
Two Josephson junctions looped together create oscillating
electrical currents that interfere, like beats in interfering
sound waves. The beat pattern changes as the magnetic field
enclosed in the loop changes, allowing an extremely precise field
measurement. In superfluids, pushing ultracold helium-3 through a
perforated Silican wall generates a vibration as the fluid
sloshes back and forth through the wall's 4,225 holes.
Classically, liquids always flow from high to low pressure.
The researchers confirmed these quantum oscillations in 1997 by
placing a sensitive superconducting SQUID microphone in the fluid
and detecting a high-pitched whistle.
For the current experiment, they took two superfluid Josephson
junctions and placed them on either side of a doughnut-shaped
tube in hopes of detecting a beat pattern produced by interfering
superfluid wavefunctions at the two junctions.
Just as a superconducting SQUID is sensitive to magnetic fields,
a superfluid SQUID is sensitive to rotation. In their experiment,
the rotation of the Earth shifted the relative phase of the fluid
oscillating through the two junctions. When these oscillations
are combined they produce an interference pattern. The
researchers connected a superconducting SQUID microphone to the
doughnut-shaped tube to detect the quantum oscillations through
the junctions, and heard a clear 273 Hertz tone. In a vivid
demonstration of the phase shifting, as the researchers tilted
the loop relative to the rotation axis of the Earth, the loudness
changed as predicted.
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