send it to a planet with a red sun where regular liquids will raise it from a small child into a great liquid who can fly and is super strong. he will then move to metropilis and fall in love with liquid lane and he will save her many times.
A fermionic condensate is a superfluid phase formed by fermionic particles at low temperatures. It is closely related to the Bose-Einstein condensate, a superfluid phase formed by bosonic atoms under similar conditions. Unlike the Bose-Einstein condensates, fermionic condensates are formed using fermions instead of bosonsSource(s):rtc
Helium is normally a gas; at very low temperatures it does liquify, but it has no solid phase, no matter how cold it gets (it does, however, have a very unusual "superfluid" phase at temperatures approaching absolute zero).
fermionic condensate is a superfluid just like a the bose-einstein codensate but this time it has the property of molecular gasses that enable the fluidity to increase its temperature
Dexter, Kansas :) I live here! Too bad nobody knows what it is, It was discovered in 1907 in Dexter, Kansas but there was previous encounters to Helium before the states, I believe it was somewhere in India
Plasma is the fourth state of matter. Yes, there are several other states of matter in addition to the most familiar states of solid, liquid, and gas. Super-heated, glowing matter (which can be seen in a fire, or in the sun) is in a state called plasma. Liquid helium as it closely approaches absolute zero (minus 273o Celsius) has a superfluid phase which is significantly different from ordinary liquids. Ultra compressed matter in a neutron star is in a state called degenerate matter. And most exotic of all, is the Bose-Einstein condensate, a form of matter in which many atoms can be superimposed upon each other in the same location.
No.
No
They have no viscosity. A superfluid can even seep out of its container.
It's a great thing, it's had zero viscosity I think (means it has no friction)
Superfluid helium is what you get when you cool helium to near absolute zero under normal atmospheric pressure (1 atm). From absolute zero up, the phases of helium at normal atmospheric pressure are superfluid, liquid, gas; higher pressure than atmospheric is required to produce solid helium. Superfluid is a state of matter that can only be understood using quantum mechanics. It is similar to a liquid, but different in certain ways: in particular, zero viscosity and infinite thermal conductivity. It is related to a Bose-Einstein Condensate. The term superfluid helium usually refers to superfluid ^4Helium, helium-4 with a nucleus containing two protons and two neutrons and overall quantum mechanical spin zero. Superfluid ^4He exists below about 4 degrees Kelvin (at 1 atm). The isotope ^3He, helium with a nucleus with only one neutron, exists as a superfluid at lower temperatures, below one kelvin, and different mathematics is required to describe it; the differences follow from the fact that the ^3He atom has quantum mechanical spin 1/2.
Only helium can become a supercooled liquid. Any other substance will solidify at the temperature needed to create a superfluid.
Alun J.E Williams has written: 'The lifetime of quantised excitations on the surface of superfluid helium'
Cecil Taverner Lane has written: 'Superfluid physics' -- subject(s): Helium, Superfluidity
John Frank Allen has written: 'Superfluid helium' -- subject(s): Superfluidity, Liquid helium
A fermionic condensate is a superfluid phase formed by fermionic particles at low temperatures. It is closely related to the Bose-Einstein condensate, a superfluid phase formed by bosonic atoms under similar conditions. Unlike the Bose-Einstein condensates, fermionic condensates are formed using fermions instead of bosonsSource(s):rtc
The worst would be a vacuum. The best probably depends on your definition of "best", but maybe something like superfluid liquid helium?
No, you can have plasma and also a few other fascinating states of matter. Try researching Bose-Einstein Superfluid state of matter.