Models for supercritical motion in a superfluid Fermi liquid
J. A. Kuorelahti, S. M. Laine, E. V. Thuneberg

TL;DR
This paper investigates the drag force on objects moving in a superfluid Fermi liquid near the Landau velocity, revealing that macroscopic objects experience a higher critical velocity and reduced drag force compared to small objects, with flow instabilities depending on quasiparticle collisions.
Contribution
It introduces a boundary condition for diffuse quasiparticle reflection and calculates the drag force on macroscopic objects, extending superfluid Fermi liquid theory to realistic moving objects.
Findings
Drag force on small objects aligns with expectations at low velocities.
Macroscopic objects exhibit a higher critical velocity than the Landau velocity.
Flow instabilities occur below the Landau velocity in collision-dominated regimes.
Abstract
We study the drag force on objects moving in a Fermi superfluid at velocities on the order of the Landau velocity . The expectation has been that is the critical velocity beyond which the drag force starts to increase towards its normal-state value. This expectation is challenged by a recent experiment measuring the heat generated by a uniformly moving wire immersed in superfluid He. We introduce the basis for the calculation of the drag force on a macroscopic object using the Fermi-liquid theory of superfluidity. As a technical tool in the calculations we propose a boundary condition that describes diffuse reflection of quasiparticles from a surface on a scale that is larger than the superfluid coherence length. We calculate the drag force on steadily moving objects of different sizes. For an object that is small compared to the coherence length, we find a drag force…
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