The Polar-phase of Superfluid <sup>3</sup>He Stabilized in Anisotropic Silica Aerogel

ORAL

Abstract

Silica aerogel can be used to introduce disorder into superfluid 3He, stablizing new phases and order parameter textures that do not occur in the pure superfluid1,2,3. In particular, aerogel can be processed to have anisotropic disorder by either stretching or compressing the samples. Using NMR spectroscopy, we observe evidence for a new superfluid phase in ~20% compressed aerogel at low pressure. The magnetic susceptibility is consistent with a state where the atoms forming the Cooper pairs have aligned spin, an equal-spin pairing state. In addition, the frequency shift of this new phase is greater than the A-phase frequency shift in isotropic aerogel. Finally, there is a second-order phase transition into the B-phase at low temperature. These three observations indicate that the polar phase of superfluid 3He has been stabilized at low pressure by the anisotropic disorder of the aerogel.

[1] J. Pollanen et al, Nature Physics 8, 317-320 (2012).
[2] J.I.A. Li et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 105302 (2015).
[3] V.V. Dmitriev et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 165304 (2015).

*This work is supported by the National Science Foundation, DMR-1602542

Presenters

  • Man Nguyen

    • Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern Univ

Authors

  • Man Nguyen

    • Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern Univ
  • Andrew Zimmerman

    • Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern Univ
  • William Halperin

    • Northwestern Univ
    • Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern Univ
    • Physics, Northwestern University