Anderson's considerations on the flow of superfluid helium: some offshoots
Eric Varoquaux

TL;DR
This paper reviews five decades of theoretical and experimental advances in superfluid helium, focusing on quantum phase, vortex dynamics, dissipation, and Josephson effects, highlighting key experiments that deepen understanding of superfluid hydrodynamics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the evolution of superfluid helium research, emphasizing experimental breakthroughs and their implications for quantum hydrodynamics and superfluid phenomena.
Findings
Experimental evidence of phase slippage in superfluid helium
Observation of vortex nucleation via quantum tunnelling
Development of superfluid interferometry techniques
Abstract
Nearly five decades have elapsed since the seminal 1966 paper of P.W. Anderson on the flow of superfluid helium, He at that time. Some of his "Considerations" -- the role of the quantum phase as a dynamical variable, the interplay between the motion of quantised vortices and potential superflow, its incidence on dissipation in the superfluid and the appearance of critical velocities, the quest for the hydrodynamic analogues of the Josephson effects in helium -- and the way they have evolved over the past half-century are recounted below. But it is due to key advances on the experimental front that phase slippage could be harnessed in the laboratory, leading to a deeper understanding of superflow, vortex nucleation, the various intrinsic and extrinsic dissipation mechanisms in superfluids, macroscopic quantum effects and the superfluid analogue of both {\it ac} and {\it dc} Josephson…
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