ABSTRACT

This book is about a certain class of superfluids, namely the high temperature superconductors. Perhaps the simplest of the superfluids is liquid He4. Since the very early days of quantum mechanics it has been known that the helium atom He4 is a boson; it is built of an even number of particles (two electrons, two neutrons and two protons), so that a wave function ^(ri,F2) must be symmetrical in FI — r? where FI, r-z are the electron's coordinates. This has the result that half the rotational states of the molecule H62 are absent and that the scattering of alpha particles by helium for low energies deviates from the Rutherford scattering law. It also has the remarkable result that this is not so for the light isotope He3, which shows that the number of neutrons in the nucleus affects properties depending otherwise only on the electrons and nuclear charge.