2017
DOI: 10.1038/nphys4151
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Rotational superradiant scattering in a vortex flow

Abstract: When an incident wave scatters o of an obstacle, it is partially reflected and partially transmitted. In theory, if the obstacle is rotating, waves can be amplified in the process, extracting energy from the scatterer. Here we describe in detail the first laboratory detection of this phenomenon, known as superradiance [1][2][3][4] . We observed that waves propagating on the surface of water can be amplified after being scattered by a draining vortex. The maximum amplification measured was 14% ± 8%, obtained fo… Show more

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Cited by 234 publications
(281 citation statements)
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“…B asymptotic expressions for the norm and energy). The second important point to notice is that for a single frequency wave, the conservation law (19) takes the form…”
Section: B Conservation Lawsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…B asymptotic expressions for the norm and energy). The second important point to notice is that for a single frequency wave, the conservation law (19) takes the form…”
Section: B Conservation Lawsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notice that unlike equation(18), the local conservation law(19) does not rely on any assumption on boundary terms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, factors such as the presence/absence of impurities in the water and their nature and concentration, the atmospheric temperature and its variation in time, the temperature at the bottom of the "lake" (in practice, a deep tank), the lack of winds, and the depth of the "lake" can all be controlled in a laboratory setting. The equipment necessary to conduct an analogue gravity experiment bsed on the physics of water is common in cold laboratories studying snow and ice, while the equipment required is not sophisticated in comparison with that used in conventional analogue gravity in which black holes, cosmological spacetimes, and curved space phenomena such as Hawking radiation, su-perradiance, and false vacuum decay require the use of Bose-Einstein condensates [22][23][24][25]61], ultracold atoms [62], optical systems [63,64], or at least very finely controlled water flows and vortices (e.g., [65][66][67][68]). Likewise, the experimental study of the analogy between freezing lakes and cosmology would require a much simpler laboratory setting than it would be necessary to study the analogy between cosmology and large geological systems such as glaciers and beaches, which also exhibit analogies with cosmology [26,27].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, a rotating draining fluid vortex flow v r ∝ 1/r, v θ ∝ 1/r has been the subject of much attention in the literature from this perspective [15] and is an analogue for a rotating black hole spacetime, possessing both an event horizon and an ergo-region. In optics the rotating spacetime with v θ ∝ 1/r naturally arises for an optical beam with orbital angular momentum (OAM) (see [36] for example).…”
Section: Relationship With Analogue Models and Rotating Black Holesmentioning
confidence: 99%