论文标题
基本物理常数的冷凝物质的性质
Properties of condensed matter from fundamental physical constants
论文作者
论文摘要
基本的物理常数在物理学中起着强烈的作用。例如,它们控制着核反应,恒星的形成,核合成和生物学上至关重要的元素的稳定性。这些是在粒子物理,天文学和宇宙学中讨论的高能过程。最近,人们意识到,基本的物理常数将其管理覆盖范围扩展到在凝结物质系统中运行的低能过程和属性,通常会出乎意料。这些特性是我们每天经历的那些特性,可以定期测量,包括粘度,导热率,弹性和声音。在这里,我们回顾了这项工作。我们从液体粘度的下限开始,其起源,并显示如何将绑定与基本物理常数相关联。运动粘度的下限表示相图上的全局最小值。我们展示了这结果如何回答Purcell和Weisskopf考虑的长期存在的问题,即粘度永远不会低于某个价值。随之而来的见解是,水粘度和水基寿命非常适合基本常数,为人类原则增加了另一个更高层的层。然后,我们讨论Liquid He中的粘度最小值,高于$λ$ - 点。随后,我们考虑了一个非常不同的特性,热扩散率,并表明它具有与粘度相同的最小值。我们还讨论了与弹性性能,弹性模量及其在低维系统中相关的界限,并展示了这些边界与声音速度的上限如何相关。我们最终列出了对基本常数和界限提高物理理论的讨论的方式。
Fundamental physical constants play a profound role in physics. For example, they govern nuclear reactions, formation of stars, nuclear synthesis and stability of biologically vital elements. These are high-energy processes discussed in particle physics, astronomy and cosmology. More recently, it was realised that fundamental physical constants extend their governing reach to low-energy processes and properties operating in condensed matter systems, often in an unexpected way. These properties are those we experience daily and can routinely measure, including viscosity, thermal conductivity, elasticity and sound. Here, we review this work. We start with the lower bound on liquid viscosity, its origin and show how to relate the bound to fundamental physical constants. The lower bound of kinematic viscosity represents the global minimum on the phase diagram. We show how this result answers the long-standing question considered by Purcell and Weisskopf, namely why viscosity never falls below a certain value. An accompanying insight is that water viscosity and water-based life are well attuned to fundamental constants, adding another higher-level layer to the anthropic principle. We then discuss viscosity minima in liquid He above and below the $λ$-point. We subsequently consider a very different property, thermal diffusivity, and show that it has the same minimum fixed by fundamental physical constants as viscosity. We also discuss bounds related to elastic properties, elastic moduli and their analogues in low-dimensional systems, and show how these bounds are related to the upper bound for the speed of sound. We conclude with listing ways in which the discussion of fundamental constants and bounds advance physical theories.