Effects of Incipient Pairing on Non-equilibrium Quasiparticle Transport in Fermi Liquids
Wei-Ting Lin, J. A. Sauls

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for understanding how incipient Cooper pairing influences non-equilibrium quasiparticle transport in Fermi liquids near a superfluid transition, with applications to superconductors, nuclear matter, and liquid helium-3.
Contribution
It introduces a new theory incorporating pairing fluctuations into quasiparticle transport near a BCS transition, extending Landau's Fermi liquid theory for non-equilibrium conditions.
Findings
Quantitative agreement with experimental attenuation of zero sound in liquid helium-3.
Identification of pairing fluctuation effects as a new scattering channel.
Extension of Fermi liquid theory to include incipient pairing near phase transitions.
Abstract
The low temperature properties of a wide range of many-fermion systems are well understood within the framework of Landau's theory of Fermi liquids. The low-energy physics of these systems is governed by interacting fermionic quasiparticles with momenta and energies near a Fermi surface in momentum space. Nonequilibrium properties are described by a kinetic equation for the distribution function for quasiparticles proposed by Landau. Quasiparticle interactions with other quasiparticles, phonons or impurities lead to internal forces acting on a distribution of nonequilibrium quasiparticles, as well as collision processes that ultimately limit the transport of mass, heat, charge and magnetization, as well as limit the coherence times of quasiparticles. For Fermi liquids that are close to a second order phase transition, e.g. Fermi liquids that undergo a superfluid transition,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
