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- Layering Transition in Superfluid Helium Adsorbed on a Carbon Nanotube Mechanical Resonator doi link

Auteur(s): Noury A., Vergara-Cruz Jorge, Morfin Pascal, Plaçais Bernard, Gordillo Maria, Boronat Jordi, Balibar Sebastien, Bachtold Adrian

(Article) Publié: Physical Review Letters, vol. 122 p. (2019)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : openaccess


Ref HAL: hal-02318660_v1
PMID 31075030
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.122.165301
WoS: 000466439100004
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
10 Citations
Résumé:

Helium is recognized as a model system for the study of phase transitions. Of particular interest is the superfluid phase in two dimensions. We report measurements on superfluid helium films adsorbed on the surface of a suspended carbon nanotube. We measure the mechanical vibrations of the nanotube to probe the adsorbed helium film. We demonstrate the formation of helium layers up to five atoms thickness. Upon increasing the vapor pressure, we observe layer-by-layer growth with discontinuities in both the number of adsorbed atoms and the speed of the third sound in the adsorbed film. These hitherto unobserved discontinuities point to a series of first-order layering transitions. Our results show that helium multilayers adsorbed on a nanotube are of unprecedented quality compared to previous works. They pave the way to new studies of quantized superfluid vortex dynamics on cylindrical surfaces, of the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless phase transition in this new geometry, and perhaps also to supersolidity in crystalline single layers as predicted in quantum Monte Carlo calculations.