Physicists Hear High-Tech Whistle While They Work
02.10.05
It was music to the ears of physicists at the University of
California, Berkeley, when they forced liquid helium-4 through
thousands of tiny holes and heard a whistling sound.
Image right: Dr. Richard Packard, U.C. Berkeley professor, left, and Emile Hoskinson, U.C. Berkeley graduate student, right, shown with a cyrostat insert, where the experiment was conducted. Image credit: NASA/JPL.
+ Play audio of quantum whistle, a sound that goes from high to low
Why the big fuss about an odd sound? It seems this breakthrough
might eventually lead to enhanced earthquake studies and more
accurate navigation systems, including the
Global Positioning System (GPS).
It all starts with one slippery liquid helium-4. Ultra-cold
helium-4 becomes a superfluid, meaning it flows without friction.
The scientists squashed it through an array of apertures 1,000
times smaller than the width of a human hair. The liquid
whooshed faster and faster, until it reached a critical velocity.
At that point, in a strange phenomenon, a microscopic quantum
whirlpool dashed across each aperture, carrying away some of the
helium-4's flow energy. This abruptly slowed the flow. The fluid
repeatedly sped up and slowed down, creating vibrations that
produced a whistling sound going from high to low.
A recording of the sound, called a quantum whistle, is available
online at:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/technologies/whistle.html.
"This whistle caught us by surprise," said UC Berkeley physics
professor Dr. Richard Packard. "It turns out a single aperture
will not make the whistle, because of random speed fluctuations.
Our experiment shows all the flows through the holes are acting
together, coherently, producing the whistle. We suspect it's like
hearing thousands of crickets chirping in unison on a summer
night."
Packard said this new phenomenon might lead to improved whistling
superfluid navigation gyroscopes that detect extremely small
rotational motion. As their motion changes, the whistle's volume
would change. This would be especially useful on submarines or
airplanes in regions where GPS signals are unavailable.
The GPS navigation system relies on knowing the state of Earth's
rotation. Because weather and other factors affect Earth's
rotation, the GPS system needs constant updating for accuracy.
GPS gets its Earth rotation data from an array of radio
telescopes distributed around the world. A very sensitive
rotation sensor might complement the existing telescope array,
providing data quickly and inexpensively.
Superfluid gyroscopes are devices that detect very small
rotational motion. They use a specially-shaped, superfluid-filled
vessel containing two aperture arrays; when the vessel rotates,
the sound of the quantum whistle changes. This provides a
telltale clue and allows for sensitive measures of the movements.
"This phenomenon may also permit scientists to develop very
sensitive rotation sensors to measure small surface twisting
signals created when an earthquake's vibrations travel through
irregularities in the Earth's crust," Packard said. "In fact, we
can take this concept even further. If seismologists can measure
rotation signals from seismic activity on Mars, they might learn
a lot about martian structure."
Packard and his colleagues have a history of hearing whistles
while they work. Their experiments in 1997 and 2001, using liquid
helium-3, produced a whistle. But the temperatures needed in
those experiments were extremely low, just a few thousandths of a
degree above absolute zero, which is almost one million times
colder than average room temperature. Very few people are trained
to work with such ultra-cold technology, which limits its
potential applications.
Packard and graduate student Emile Hoskinson were especially
excited because this latest phenomenon occurs at a relatively
high temperature of 2 Kelvin, which is 2,000 times warmer than
the previous helium-3 studies. This might make the technology
available to more users with off-the-shelf cryocoolers.
This research was conducted under a grant from NASA and the
National Science Foundation. The findings appeared in the January
27 issue of Nature. More information about Packard's research is
online at
http://www.physics.berkeley.edu/research/packard/.
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology,
Pasadena, Calif., manages the Quantum Technology in Life Support
and Habitation Program for NASA's Exploration Systems Mission
Directorate.
Jane Platt (818) 354-0880
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
2005-025