The Joule-Thomson effect reflects the interaction among constituent particles of macroscopic system.Forclassical ideal gas,the corresponding Joule-Thomson coefficient is vanishing while it is non-zero for ideal quantu...The Joule-Thomson effect reflects the interaction among constituent particles of macroscopic system.Forclassical ideal gas,the corresponding Joule-Thomson coefficient is vanishing while it is non-zero for ideal quantum gasdue to the quantum degeneracy.In recent years,much attention is paid to the unitary Fermi gas with infinite two-bodyscattering length.According to universal analysis,the thermodynamical law of unitary Fermi gas is similar to that ofnon-interacting ideal gas,which can be explored by the virial theorem P = 2E/3V.Based on previous works,we furtherstudy the unitary Fermi gas properties.The effective chemical potential is introduced to characterize the nonlinear levelscrossing effects in a strongly interacting medium.The changing behavior of the rescaled Joule-Thomson coefficientaccording to temperature manifests a quite different behavior from that for ideal Fermi gas.展开更多
基金Supported in part by Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant Nos.10875050,10675052MOE of China under Grant No.IRT0624
文摘The Joule-Thomson effect reflects the interaction among constituent particles of macroscopic system.Forclassical ideal gas,the corresponding Joule-Thomson coefficient is vanishing while it is non-zero for ideal quantum gasdue to the quantum degeneracy.In recent years,much attention is paid to the unitary Fermi gas with infinite two-bodyscattering length.According to universal analysis,the thermodynamical law of unitary Fermi gas is similar to that ofnon-interacting ideal gas,which can be explored by the virial theorem P = 2E/3V.Based on previous works,we furtherstudy the unitary Fermi gas properties.The effective chemical potential is introduced to characterize the nonlinear levelscrossing effects in a strongly interacting medium.The changing behavior of the rescaled Joule-Thomson coefficientaccording to temperature manifests a quite different behavior from that for ideal Fermi gas.