Nenad
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could somebody give me insight on the subject please. 

The discussion revolves around the concepts of superfluidity and superconductivity, exploring their definitions, characteristics, and the conditions under which they occur. Participants delve into the nature of these phenomena, their abrupt transitions, and the implications of their unique properties.
Participants express a mix of agreement and disagreement, particularly regarding the implications of Homes's law and the nature of high-temperature superconductors. The discussion remains unresolved on several points, especially concerning the significance of various parameters in superconductivity.
Some claims rely on specific definitions and assumptions about the behavior of materials at low temperatures, and there are unresolved questions about the relationship between different parameters in high-temperature superconductors.
This discussion may be of interest to those studying condensed matter physics, superconductivity, and superfluidity, as well as individuals seeking to understand the complexities and ongoing debates in these areas of research.

Nenad said:could somebody give me insight on the subject please.![]()
Gonzolo said:The interesting thing is that when we mean zero, we mean zero.
ZapperZ said:Exactly! These phenomena aren't achieved in a gradual fashion as one varies various relevant parameters like temperature, and the quantities such as electrical resistance just doesn't become smaller and smaller until they are too small to measure (but still non-zero in principle). They are an abrupt phase transition in which the material has undergone a definite change in state. So quantities such as electrical resistance, viscosity, and bulk magnetization would drop abruptly as one crosses over the critical parameter.
Zz.
Nenad said:so can this be acheved over a long period of time. I heard that you attain supeconductivity when you cool certain materials at super low temperatures. How would superfluidity work, and how is it tested?
Gonzolo said:At least one experiment has maintained superconductivity for more than a year.
Electrical currents have been observed to flow without attenuation in superconducting rings for more than a year,
until at last the experimentalist wearied of the experiment.
The decay of supercurrents in a solenoid was studied by File and Mills using precision nuclear resonance methods
to measure the magnetic field associated with the supercurrent.
They concluded that the decay time of the supercurrent is not less than 100,000 years.
kurious said:Superfluidity comes about when all the atoms of helium in a bucket of liquid helium
become one big atom! This happens because the Helium atoms change from being
spin 1/2 particles to spin 1 and obey bose-einstein statistics instead of fermi -dirac statistics.The helium climbs out of the bucket without any help.
Nenad said:that explains a lot, but could you explain the last sentince. I am not sure what you mean.
meteor said:Can Homes's law provide an answer to the mistery of high-temperature superconductors?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homes's_law