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![]() Russell J. Donnelly 541-346-4226 (Tel) 541-346-5861 (Fax) |
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Saturated Vapor Pressure
3.1.c. The Roton Minimum The region of the spectrum denoted (c) in figure 1 is called the "roton minimum" and can be very well represented by Landau's parabolic expression
where is the minimum roton energy, or energy gap, p0 is the roton momentum
at minimum energy, and ??is the effective mass of excitation near p0.
These three quantities which describe the roton minimum are called the
"Landau parameters", and have the typical values at 1.I K, SVP
of
Values
of eq (6) are given in table 24.
An
expression which describes the temperature and density dependence of(,T)/k has
been given by Brooks and Donnelly [16]: where
and
U2 = 1.239037 (m K-1)
U3 = -1.238153 (m g-1 cm3)
U4 = -0.2234561 (m K-1 g cm-3)
U5 = -13429.95 (m)
U6 =632197.06 (m g-1 cm3) The experimental roton energy gap and effective mass are shown in figures 5 and 6 with the results of eqs (11) and (12) respectively. Although eqs (11) and (12) suggest an expansion in terms of the roton number density, no particular theoretical significance can be attached to the terms in these equations. We will see in section 3.1.f below that the experimental values of and described in this section will have to be adjusted slightly to obtain the accurate thermodynamic information from the Landau theory.
3.1d. The Shoulder beyond the Roton Minimum Recent
neutron scattering experimental results (Graf, Minkiewicz, Møller,
and Passell [6] indicate that for momenta larger than po/
where
This
approximation is also indicated in figure 3 as the straight line above
pe/ 3.1.e. A Polynomial Representation for the Excitation Spectrum We
may summarize the behavior of the excitation spectrum described in the
previous sections in the following way: at
point (a) of figure 1. Here
at point (b) in figure 1. Continuing down to the roton minimum, we find that the parabolic representation near po provides us with the relations
at point (c) of figure 1. Beyond the roton minimum, for momentum pc where the slope approaches the velocity at sound, we finally have
at
point (d) in figure 1.
is
an excellent representation for the excitation spectrum in the momentum
interval The
coefficients an
of eq (20) may be obtained for any temperature and pressure by applying
the conditions imposed by eqs (16) through (19), which in turn will depend
on T and P. Since there is no constant term, and the
first coefficient must be u1,
the problem of determining the coefficients an
is reduced to solving six equations with six unknowns, at any temperature
and pressure.
Figure 7. The excitation spectrum at two pressures at 1.1 K. Dots, SVP, open circles, 25.3 atm, Henshaw and Woods [4]; triangles, 1.25 K, 24.26 atm, Dietrich et al.[3]; solid lines, eqs (20) and (14). As mentioned in section 3.1.a, a controversy surrounds the exact form that eq (20) should have for small momenta. We make here several comments concerning our choice of eq (20). First, we found that a series with no quadratic term was by far the best fit to the neutron data. A detailed comparison of several series is given by Brooks [18]. Secondly, one can see by inspection of the results of such calculations that the coefficient of the first nonlinear term a3 changes sign upon increasing pressure. We find this to be consistent with the results of Phillips et al. [28] (see Brooks and Donnelly [17]). Finally, the form of eq (20) has prompted us to make some calculations concerning the low temperature behavior of the second sound velocity (Brooks and Donnelly [30]). The second sound velocity is quite sensitive to the leading terms in (20) and a careful measurement would serve as a check on the form we have chosen [30].
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