superfluid helium-3 tagged posts

What’s in a name? A New Class of Superconductors: Commonly mistaken name leads to broader discovery

“Levitation of a magnet on top of a superconductor 2” by Jubobroff, Fbouquet, LPS is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

A new theory that could explain how unconventional superconductivity arises in a diverse set of compounds might never have happened if physicists Qimiao Si and Emilian Nica had chosen a different name for their 2017 model of orbital-selective superconductivity.

In a study published this month in npj Quantum Materials, Si of Rice University and Nica of Arizona State University argue that unconventional superconductivity in some iron-based and heavy-fermion materials arises from a general phenomenon called “multiorbital singlet pairing.”

In superconductors, electrons form pairs and flow without resistance...

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New Quantum Structures in Super-chilled Helium may Mirror early days of Universe

Fig. 1
The experimental setup and superfluid phase diagram in nanoconfinement.

For the first time, researchers have documented the long-predicted occurrence of ‘walls bound by strings’ in superfluid helium-3. The existence of such an object, originally foreseen by cosmology theorists, may help explaining how the universe cooled down after the Big Bang. With the newfound ability to recreate these structures in the lab, earth-based scientists finally have a way to study some of the possible scenarios that might have taken place in the early universe more closely. The findings, to be published 16th January in Nature Communications, came after two successive symmetry-breaking phase transitions at Aalto University’s Low Temperature Laboratory.

Helium stays a liquid at atmospheric pressure even wh...

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