Atomic Heat of Indium below 20°K
- 15 October 1953
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 92 (2) , 258-267
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrev.92.258
Abstract
A calorimetric technique in which a carbon-composition resistor serves simultaneously as both heater and thermometer has been developed and is described briefly. Using this technique, the atomic heat of indium has been measured in the normal state from 1.7°K to 21.3°K and in the superconducting state from 1.8°K to 3.396°K, the transition temperature in zero magnetic field. Tables of smoothed values are given. A method of deducing the separate lattice and electronic contributions to the heat capacities, based on several empirically and/or theoretically tenable assumptions, has been developed and is described in some detail. This method of analysis, when applied to the indium data, led to the conclusion that a cubic analytic form for the critical magnetic field equation would allow conclusions consistent with all the assumptions but that the more commonly used parabolic form would not. Numerical values are given for the constants involved. The temperature dependence of the Debye characteristic temperature of the indium lattice over the entire range of measurement is shown to follow the theoretically expected behavior.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- On supraconductivity IPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- The Low Temperature Characteristics of Carbon-Composition ThermometersReview of Scientific Instruments, 1952
- Superconductivity of the Isotopes of TinPhysical Review B, 1952
- The Atomic Heat of Lead in the Region of its Transition to SuperconductivityPhysical Review B, 1952
- Atomic Heat of Indium at Liquid Helium TemperaturesPhysical Review B, 1950
- Tables of Vapour Pressure of Liquid HeliumNature, 1949
- The theory of the specific heat of solidsReports on Progress in Physics, 1941
- On the vibrational spectrum of at three-dimensiional latticeProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1937
- Zur Elektronentheorie der Metalle auf Grund der Fermischen StatistikThe European Physical Journal A, 1928
- The disturbance of supra-conductivity by magnetic fields and currents. The hypothesis of silsbeeJournal of the Franklin Institute, 1926