. (2012). Quasielastic scattering in the interaction of ultracold neutrons with a liquid wall and application in a reanalysis of the Mambo I neutron-lifetime experiment. We develop a theory of ultracold and very cold neutron scattering on viscoelastic surface waves up to second-order perturbation theory. The results are applied to reanalyze the 1989 neutron-lifetime experiment using ultracold neutron storage in a Fomblin-coated vessel by Mampe et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 63, 593 (1989)]. Inclusion of this theory of the quasielastic scattering process in the data analysis shifts the neutron lifetime value from 887.6 ± 3 to 882.5 ± 2.1 s.
We discuss the viscosity damping effect on capillary waves in a binary-liquid system, using the linearized Navier-Stokes equation. The damping correction for the dispersion relation depends on the wave vector k as well as the interfacial tension. The calculated k-dependence of damping is characterized by a critical capillary-wave-number value , which separates the regions of weak and strong damping. The surface and interfacial roughnesses of a binary liquid system with large liquid depths are calculated and compared to experiments. Although the analysis has been restricted to the classical, macroscopic level, we obtain a noticeable modification from earlier hydrodynamic results for capillary wave damping and liquid-liquid interfacial roughness.
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