2001
DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198506409.001.0001
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Helium Three

Abstract: The condensed phases of helium three provide an exciting laboratory for many fundamental questions in condensed matter physics. Due to its light mass and weak interatomic potential, the condensed phases of helium display quantum effects more dramatically than any other atomic system. Intuition based on classical experience is often misleading in these phases: the solid phase for instance is less ordered at low temperature than the liquid phase. The book covers all the low temperature properties of helium three… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…A softer core potential with intermediate range attraction may be relevant to understanding the mobility of positive ions in 3 He-A, given that the positive ion attracts 3 He to form a "snowball" of 3 He atoms with increased density relative to bulk 3 He. 30 Indeed preliminary measurements of the longitudinal and transverse forces on a positive ion in 3 He-A show different magnitudes and temperature dependences for the longitudinal mobility and anomalous Hall ratio compared to the negative ion. 9 However, a detailed theoretical description of the structure and transport properties of the positive ion is outside the scope of this report.…”
Section: Beyond the Hard Sphere Potentialmentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A softer core potential with intermediate range attraction may be relevant to understanding the mobility of positive ions in 3 He-A, given that the positive ion attracts 3 He to form a "snowball" of 3 He atoms with increased density relative to bulk 3 He. 30 Indeed preliminary measurements of the longitudinal and transverse forces on a positive ion in 3 He-A show different magnitudes and temperature dependences for the longitudinal mobility and anomalous Hall ratio compared to the negative ion. 9 However, a detailed theoretical description of the structure and transport properties of the positive ion is outside the scope of this report.…”
Section: Beyond the Hard Sphere Potentialmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…26 When an electric field pushes the electron into Helium the combination of the barrier, the surface tension and zero-point kinetic energy of the electron conspire to form a self-trapped electron in a spherical void of radius R, an "electron bubble". [27][28][29][30] The basic model of an electron bubble in liquid 3 He is based on an energy function that consists of three terms, 27,31…”
Section: Electron Bubbles In Liquid 3 Hementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Once taking that step, the situation is even more favorable than in case of nuclei. The ab initio calculations for 3 He matter have converged to generally accepted, satisfying degree of reliability [12] and there exists experimental access to bulk 3 He over a wide range of pressures [13]. Both facts provide well tested data as input for a proper calibration of density functionals.…”
Section: Mean-field: a Possible Common Theorymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The criterion in Eq. (2) is well satisfied at ε A 0.5ε F , where ε F 0.016 − 0.025 eV (for UPt 3 [41]), ε F 0.1 − 0.3 eV (for organic compounds [36]), ε F 4.4 × 10 −4 eV (for liquid 3 He [42]) and ε F 10 −10 eV (for ultracold atomic Fermi gases [43]). For the mass density of nuclear matter ρ M 10 11 g/cm 3 [44], we find ε F 0.38 MeV.…”
Section: Criterion For Bosonization Of Cooper Pairsmentioning
confidence: 99%