Quantized vortices in superfluid He3

M. M. Salomaa and G. E. Volovik
Rev. Mod. Phys. 59, 533 – Published 1 July 1987; Erratum Rev. Mod. Phys. 60, 573 (1988)
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Abstract

The first measurements on vortices in rotating superfluid He3 have been conducted in the Low Temperature Laboratory at Helsinki University of Technology during the past five years. These experiments have revealed unique vortex phenomena that are not observed in any other known superfluids. In this review, the concept of broken symmetry is applied to investigate the quantized vortex lines in superfluid He3. In the superfluid A phase, vorticity can be supported by a continuous winding of the order parameter; this gives rise to continuous "coreless" vortices with two flow quanta. Novel vortices with a half-integer number of circulation quanta may also exist in He3-A due to a combined symmetry of the superfluid state. In the superfluid B phase, the vortices have a complicated core structure. The vortex-core matter is ferromagnetic and superfluid, and it displays broken parity. The ferromagnetism of the core is observed in NMR experiments due to a gyromagnetic effect. The calculated core structures exhibit an experimentally observed first-order phase transition. This vortex-core transition in rotating He3-B may be understood in terms of a change in the topology for flaring-out of the vortex singularity into higher dimensions; the topological identification further suggests that the phase transition manifests a spontaneous bifurcation of vorticity—involving half-quantum vortices in He3-B. These recent advances of interest in quantum liquids are also of general relevance to a wide range of fields beyond low-temperature physics.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.59.533

    ©1987 American Physical Society

    Erratum

    Erratum: Quantized vortices in superfluid He3

    M. M. Salomaa and G. E. Volovik
    Rev. Mod. Phys. 60, 573 (1988)

    Authors & Affiliations

    M. M. Salomaa

    • Low Temperature Laboratory, Helsinki University of Technology, SF-02150 Espoo 15, Finland

    G. E. Volovik

    • L. D. Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics, U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences, 117334 Moscow, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

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    Issue

    Vol. 59, Iss. 3 — July - September 1987

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