Pair breaking at the surface of the unconventional superfluid
ORAL
Abstract
In unconventional p-wave superfluid 3He, Cooper pairs are subject to anisotropic pair breaking in the vicinity of surfaces and interfaces. This effect dominates when the superfluid is confined in a cavity of height comparable to the coherence length. The surface pair-breaking depends on the boundary condition for surface scattering of quasiparticles. We study superfluid 3He confined in a single nanofabricated 200 nm high cavity, using SQUID-NMR as a probe of superfluid order parameter, and pressure as a tuning parameter. The surface scattering is also tuned in situ, by adjustment of the surface boundary layer. We make an accurate determination of the suppression of the superfluid transition temperature, Tc. We also measure the gap suppression for different boundary conditions. With a solid 4He surface layer we find close to diffuse scattering, while by coating the surface with a superfluid 4He film we find close to perfect specular scattering, with the almost complete elimination of Tc and gap suppression. With a solid 3He layer on the surface, the observed Tc suppression is significantly stronger than that predicted by quasiclassical theory with diffuse scattering boundary conditions.
*This work was supported by EPSRC EP/J02204/1.
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Presenters
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John Saunders
- Physics, Royal Holloway University of London