The Frequency Dependence of Critical-velocity Behavior in Oscillatory Flow of Superfluid Helium-4 Through a 2-micrometer by 2-micrometer Aperture in a Thin Foil
J. A. Flaten, C. A. Lindensmith, W. Zimmermann Jr

TL;DR
This study investigates how the critical velocity in oscillatory superfluid helium-4 flow through a tiny aperture varies with frequency and temperature, revealing frequency-dependent changes in dissipation and phase-slip behavior.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the frequency dependence of critical velocity and dissipation mechanisms in superfluid helium-4 flow through micro-apertures.
Findings
Critical velocity decreases linearly with temperature at low frequencies.
High frequencies induce large energy-loss events and altered supercritical behavior.
Frequency influences the temperature at which dissipation behavior changes.
Abstract
The critical-velocity behavior of oscillatory superfluid Helium-4 flow through a 2-micrometer by 2-micrometer aperture in a 0.1-micrometer-thick foil has been studied from 0.36 K to 2.10 K at frequencies from less than 50 Hz up to above 1880 Hz. The pressure remained less than 0.5 bar. In early runs during which the frequency remained below 400 Hz, the critical velocity was a nearly-linearly decreasing function of increasing temperature throughout the region of temperature studied. In runs at the lowest frequencies, isolated 2 Pi phase slips could be observed at the onset of dissipation. In runs with frequencies higher than 400 Hz, downward curvature was observed in the decrease of critical velocity with increasing temperature. In addition, above 500 Hz an alteration in supercritical behavior was seen at the lower temperatures, involving the appearance of large energy-loss events. These…
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