Rotational quantum friction in superfluids: Radiation from object rotating in superfluid vacuum
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- Published by Pleiades Publishing Ltd in JETP Letters
- Vol. 69 (4) , 281-287
- https://doi.org/10.1134/1.568024
Abstract
The friction experienced by a body rotating in a superfluid liquid at T=0 is discussed. The effect is analogous to the amplification of electromagnetic radiation and spontaneous emission by a body or black hole rotating in the quantum vacuum, first discussed by Zel’dovich and Starobinsky. The friction is caused by the interaction of the part of the liquid which is rigidly connected with the rotating body and thus represents a comoving detector, with the “Minkowski” superfluid vacuum outside the body. The emission process is the quantum tunneling of quasiparticles from the detector to the ergoregion, where the energy of quasiparticles is negative in the rotating frame. This quantum rotational friction caused by the emission of quasiparticles is estimated for phonons and rotons in superfluid 4He and for Bogoliubov fermions in superfluid 3He.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effective spacetime and Hawking radiation from a moving domain wall in a thin film of 3He-AJETP Letters, 1998
- Event horizons and ergoregions inPhysical Review D, 1998
- The many faces of superradiancePhysical Review D, 1998
- Acoustic black holes: horizons, ergospheres and Hawking radiationClassical and Quantum Gravity, 1998
- Quantum aspects of ergoregion instabilityPhysical Review D, 1997
- Detecting the rotating quantum vacuumPhysical Review D, 1996
- Single-Vortex Nucleation in Rotating Superfluid 3 He-BEurophysics Letters, 1995
- Spontaneous excitation of an accelerated atom: The contributions of vacuum fluctuations and radiation reactionPhysical Review A, 1994
- Experimental Black-Hole Evaporation?Physical Review Letters, 1981
- Notes on black-hole evaporationPhysical Review D, 1976