"Capturing the Elusive Second Sound: Physicists Measure Heat 'Sloshing' in Superfluid"

TL;DR Summary
Physicists in the US have developed a new technique for monitoring "second sound," a peculiar heat wave that occurs in superfluids, which could help model various poorly understood systems. The technique involves imaging heat flow in a strongly interacting Fermi gas composed of ultracold lithium-6 atoms, providing direct measurements of heat transfer and anomalous behavior at critical temperatures. This research has implications for high-temperature superconductors, neutron stars, and other systems, and the new technique is expected to be applied in systems where the whole system is far from equilibrium.
- Physicists take the temperature of second sound – Physics World physicsworld.com
- Scientists Confirm the Incredible Existence of 'Second Sound' Popular Mechanics
- MIT physicists capture the first sounds of heat “sloshing” in a superfluid MIT News
- Thermography of the superfluid transition in a strongly interacting Fermi gas Science
- Heat caught moving like sound waves in a superfluid for first time New Atlas
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