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Physics Update

Where did the supersolidity go?

New precautions in the repetition of an old experiment have wiped out its evidence for an exotic quantum phase of matter.

October 31, 2012

Published: October 31, 2012

Helium is a rich source of exotic phenomena. Below 2.2 K, helium-4 exhibits superfluidity, a manifestation of Bose–Einstein condensation. And 4He doesn't solidify at any temperature, except under very high pressure. Lattice vacancies in solid 4He are thought to remain mobile down to absolute zero. Therefore, theorists have long suggested that quantum condensation of those vacancies might create a "supersolid" phase in which atoms flow without hindrance or dissipation. The first apparent sighting of supersolidity came in 2004. Moses Chan's group at the Pennsylvania State University reported an abrupt drop in the period of a torsion oscillator (shown in the photo) when its frozen 4He sample was cooled below 0.2 K. The drop was attributed to a decrease of the sample's moment of inertia as about 1% of it transitions into a supersolid and thus decouples from the oscillation. Numerous later experiments by groups worldwide found similar results. But following the 2007 discovery of an abrupt rise in the elastic stiffness of bulk solid 4He just at the presumed transition temperature, the supersolid interpretation has been in doubt. However, because Chan's 2004 experiment was meant to confine the solid 4He within the nanopores of a porous glass, the result should have been immune to the stiffening of bulk solid 4He. But that design might have allowed inadvertent thin films of solid 4He outside the glass to stiffen the oscillator. So now the group has redone the old experiment with a new sample-holder design that eliminates the possibility of such films. And this time they find no evidence of a transition to supersolidity. (D. Kim, M. Chan, Phys. Rev. Lett., in press, available at http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.7050.)—Bertram Schwarzschild


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