. Solar Energy News .




.
TIME AND SPACE
Physicists hit on mathematical description of superfluid dynamics
by Vince Stricherz
Seattle WA (SPX) Jun 13, 2011

A 2001 photo from the space shuttle shows a phenomenon called von Karman vortices in clouds downwind from Rashiri Island in the northern Sea of Japan. The vortices are similar to those that form in superfluids. Photo courtesy NASA.

It has been 100 years since the discovery of superconductivity, a state achieved when mercury was cooled, with the help of liquid helium, to nearly the coldest temperature achievable to form a superfluid that provides no resistance to electrons as they flow through it.

During that century, scientists have struggled to find a precise mathematical explanation of why and how this strange fluid behaves as it does. Liquid helium-4 itself becomes a superfluid when cooled to within a few degrees of absolute zero on the Kelvin scale (minus 273 Celsius or minus 460 Fahrenheit), and the resulting lack of viscosity allows it to seem to defy gravity, flowing up and over the sides of a container.

Now a team led by a University of Washington physicist, using the most powerful supercomputer available for open science, has devised a theoretical framework that explains the real-time behavior of superfluids that are made of fermions - subatomic particles such as electrons, protons and neutrons that are basic building blocks of nature.

Such superfluids are found in neutron stars, which rotate between one and 1,000 times a second. These stars, also called pulsars, have 50 percent greater mass than the sun but are packed so densely that one can occupy an area only about the size of a city such as Seattle, said Aurel Bulgac, a UW physics professor and lead author of a paper in the June 10 edition of Science that details the work.

As a neutron star rotates, the superfluid on the surface behaves quite differently than a liquid would on the surface of the Earth. As the rotational speed increases the fluid opens a series of small vortices. As the vortices assemble into triangular patterns, the triangles build a lattice structure within the superfluid.

"When you reach the correct speed, you'll create one vortex in the middle," Bulgac said. "And as you increase the speed, you will increase the number of vortices. But it always occurs in steps."

Similar behavior can be recreated in a laboratory using a vacuum chamber and a laser beam to create a high-intensity electrical field that will cool a small sample, perhaps 1 million atoms, to temperatures near absolute zero. A "laser spoon" then can stir the superfluid fast enough to create vortices.

In trying to understand the odd behavior, scientists have attempted to devise descriptive equations, such as ones they might use to describe the swirling action in a cup of coffee as it is stirred, Bulgac said. But to describe the action in a superfluid made of fermions, a nearly limitless number of equations is needed.

Each describes what happens if just one variable - such as velocity, temperature or density - is changed. Because the variables are linked, if one changes others will change as well.

The challenge, Bulgac said, was to formulate the proper mathematical problem and then find a computer that could work through the problem as the number of variable changes reached 1 trillion or more.

To reach its solution, the team in the last year used the JaguarPF computer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, one of the largest supercomputers in the world, for the equivalent of 70 million hours, which would require almost 8,000 years on a single-core personal computer (JaguarPF has nearly a quarter-million cores).

"This tells you the complexity of these calculations and how difficult this is," he said.

The researchers also found through their calculations that by increasing the speed at which the fluid was stirred, eventually it would lose its superfluid properties - though not as soon as previously hypothesized. (See video representations of the results from the massive numerical simulations.)

The work means that researchers can "to some extent" study the properties of a neutron star using computer simulations, Bulgac said. It also opens new directions of research in cold-atom physics.

"This is a pretty major step forward in studying these dynamic processes," he said.

Co-authors are Yuan-Lung Luo of the UW, Piotr Magierski of the Warsaw University of Technology in Poland; Kenneth Roche of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Wash.; and Yongle Yu of China's State Key Laboratory of Magnetic Resonance, Atomic and Molecular Physics. Magierski and Roche also have affiliate UW physics appointments.




Related Links
University of Washington
Understanding Time and Space

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



TIME AND SPACE
Quest for 'God particle' has setback
Batavia, Ill. (UPI) Jun 10, 2011
Scientists chasing the elusive particle known as the Higgs boson - thought to be the origin of mass - expressed disappointment when a U.S. lab turned up zip. Scientists with the Tevatron particle accelerator at Fermilab in Batavia, Ill., near Chicago, released the results of a months-long effort to confirm the existence of the so-called "God particle," Fox News reported Friday. ... read more


TIME AND SPACE
First wood-digesting enzyme found in bacteria could boost biofuel production

Viable Pathway to Develop Sustainable Aviation Biofuels Industry

Winston Wong Bio-Inspired Ice Vehicle Premiered at NCKU

Shell and Cosan fuelling a lower-carbon future with biofuels

TIME AND SPACE
Industry Helps Engineering Students Reanimate Robotic Mine Vehicles

The hand as a joystick

Guide vests robotic navigation aids for the visually impaired

Controlling robotic arms is child's play

TIME AND SPACE
Siemens unveils wind turbine prototype

German port's future blowing in the wind

China wind energy firms back subsidy move: report

US claims victory in China wind energy spat

TIME AND SPACE
Chinese firms set to take majority control of Saab

Nissan may delay electric Leaf production in US

Ford to triple hybrid vehicle production

Toyota sees net profit falling 31% to $3.5 billion this year

TIME AND SPACE
Report: Renewables a priority for military

Finding answers century-old questions about platinum's catalytic properties

China says will not use force in sea disputes

Fortescue balks at Australia's mining tax

TIME AND SPACE
Building 2D graphene metamaterials and 1-atom-thick optical devices

Singapore researchers invent broadband graphene polarizer

Iowa State physicists explain the long, useful lifetime of carbon-14

New form of girl's best friend is lighter than ever

TIME AND SPACE
'Thermal pollution' in rivers not fully mediated by gravel augmentation

Australia carbon tax to cost 14,000 jobs: study

Walker's World: Future energy wars

Unprecedented international meeting releases preliminary vision for our energy future

TIME AND SPACE
The same type of forest is good for both birds and people

European forests growing, good news for climate

Integrating agriculture and forestry in the landscape is key to REDD

Bacteria living on old-growth trees may help forests grow


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement