ABSTRACT

This chapter describes a system of interacting bosons at very low temperatures. For helium, the forces are relatively weak, while, because of its low mass, the zero-point oscillations of the individual atoms are large. The low temperature phase is called He II; the high temperature phase, He I. Indications of the existence of He II were already present in the early experiments of Kamerlingh Onnes. The "superfluidity" of He II was discovered independently, and essentially, simultaneously, by Kapitza and Allen and Misener, by studying the flow of liquid helium through a thin capillary. In the two-fluid model, superfluid He II is regarded as being composed of two fluids which are simultaneously present and mutually interpenetrating. The superfluid component is the condensate, the single condensed quantum state of the Bose liquid. The existence of superfluid flow through a narrow capillary is built into the theory.