The Free Press Journal

Indian scientists find 2 species of electrons in helium

- AGENCIES / Bengaluru –IANS

Scientists at the city-based Indian Institute of Science (IISc) for the first time discovered two species of few electron bubbles in superfluid helium gas, said an official on Monday.

“This is the first time our scientists have shown the existence of two species of few electron bubbles (FEBs) in superfluid helium. These can serve as a model to study how the energy states of electrons and interactio­ns between them influence properties,” said the official in a statement here.

The team of scientists, led by Pofessor Ambarish Ghosh at its Centre for Nano Science and Engineerin­g (CeNSE), Assistant Professor Prosenjit Sen and former physics research student

Neha Yadav, published their study in Science Advances journal.

“An electron injected into a superfluid form of helium creates a single electron bubble - a cavity free of helium atoms and containing only the electron. The shape of the bubble depends on the energy state of the electron,” the study said.

FEBs are nano-metre-sized cavities in liquid helium containing a few free electrons. The number, state and interactio­ns between them dictate the physical and chemical properties of materials.

Studying FEBs will help scientists understand how properties emerge when a few electrons in a material interact with each other. Understand­ing how FEBs are formed can provide insights into the assembly of soft materials, which can be used to develop nextgenera­tion quantum materials.

“We have experiment­ally observed FEBs for the first time and understood how they are created,” said Yadav, adding “they are nice objects with great implicatio­ns if we can create and trap them”. The team applied a voltage pulse to a tungsten tip on the surface of liquid helium. They generated a pressure wave on the charged surface, using an ultrasonic transducer. This allowed them to create 8EBs (electron bubbles) and 6EBs, two species of

FEBs containing 8 and 6 electrons.

“FEBs form an interestin­g system that has electron-electron interactio­n and electron-surface interactio­n,” said Yadav in the study. FEBs can also help scientists decipher turbulent flows in super-fluids and viscous fluids, or the flow of heat in superfluid helium.

“Like how current flows without resistance in supercondu­cting materials at very low temperatur­es, superfluid helium also conducts heat efficientl­y at very low temperatur­es,” the study pointed out.

Defects in the system, called vortices, however, can lower its thermal conductivi­ty. As FEBs are present at the core of such vortices, they can help in studying how vortices interact with each other.

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