Using second-sound shock waves to probe the intrinsic critical velocity of liquid helium II
Abstract
A critical velocity truly intrinsic to liquid helium II is experimentally sought in the bulk fluid far from the apparatus walls. Termed the ``fundamental critical velocity,'' it necessarily is caused by mutual interactions which operate between the two fluid components and which are activated at large relative velocities. It is argued that flow induced by second-sound shock waves provides the ideal means by which to activate and isolate the fundamental critical velocity from other extraneous fluid-wall interactions. Experimentally it is found that large-amplitude second-sound shock waves initiate a breakdown in the superfluidity of helium II, which is dramatically manifested as a limit to the maximum attainable shock strength. This breakdown is shown to be caused by a fundamental critical velocity. Secondary effects include boiling for ambient pressures near the saturated vapor pressure or the formation of helium I boundary layers at higher ambient pressures. When compared to the intrinsic critical velocity discovered in highly restricted geometries, the shock-induced critical velocity displays a similar temperature dependence and is the same order of magnitude.
- Publication:
-
Physics of Fluids
- Pub Date:
- November 1983
- DOI:
- 10.1063/1.864097
- Bibcode:
- 1983PhFl...26.3227T
- Keywords:
-
- Critical Velocity;
- Liquid Helium 2;
- Shock Wave Propagation;
- Sound Waves;
- Superfluidity;
- Velocity Measurement;
- Helium Ions;
- Propagation Velocity;
- Shock Tubes;
- Shock Wave Interaction;
- Temperature Dependence;
- Temperature Profiles;
- Engineering (General)