English

Comments On Supersolidity

Other Condensed Matter 2009-06-08 v1 Superconductivity

Abstract

Assuming that the well-confirmed non-classical rotational inertia (NCRI) effect in solid 4^4He, suggested by Leggett, indicates supersolid behavior, we make a number of remarks about both theory and experiment. (1) The long-wavelength, low-frequency ("hydrodynamic") part of the theory of Andreev and Lifshitz has nine variables, and thus must have nine modes. We find a new mode associated with lattice point diffusion (and thus vacancy diffusion); it may explain the absence of supersolid behavior in low-frequency pressure-driven flow. (2) The observed upper limit for the NCRI fraction (NCRIf) of about 20%, in disordered samples, is more-or-less the same as the already predicted upper limit for the superfluid fraction of a well-ordered crystal; we argue that this may not be a coincidence. (3) The negative experimental evidence for a second propagating hydrodynamic mode (expected to be fourth sound-like) may be due to the long relaxation times τ\tau at low temperature TT; only for frequencies satisfying ωτ1\omega\tau\ll1 does the hydrodynamic theory apply. (4) The fundamental principles of quantum mechanics imply that Bose-Einstein condensation is not necessary to define a quantum-mechanical phase; therefore the absence of a finite condensate fraction f0f_{0} does not necessarily imply the absence of superfluidity. (5) Just as vortices should avoid occupied lattice sites to provide a vortex-lattice interaction, the lattice should interact with the vortices to provide a lattice-vortex interaction; thus dislocations should interact with vortices, whose motion is affected by rotation. We discuss some experimental implications for the vortex liquid model, shear response, hysteresis, and relaxation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0906.1022,
  title  = {Comments On Supersolidity},
  author = {W. M. Saslow},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0906.1022},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

submitted to Physical Review B, June 4, 2009

R2 v1 2026-06-21T13:09:52.059Z