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Sorry I meant to say the suspended glass container is what empties.But what if you start with an empty beaker and push it so the bottom is below the surface in the reservoir? Will the fluid climb the sides and go into the beaker?
Assuming symmetry, I predict that the superfluid will fill the beaker.
Does anyone know how to explain the inertia of a superfluid?
Hokay. Well, leaving aside what symmetry you mean. What does a superfluid do when it rotates? rotating a ball or a sphere, "breaks the symmetry", now the sphere has two distinguished points and an axis of rotation. The ball of superfluid has to conserve momentum.
Quote from: varsigma on 10/02/2022 20:56:29Hokay. Well, leaving aside what symmetry you mean. What does a superfluid do when it rotates? rotating a ball or a sphere, "breaks the symmetry", now the sphere has two distinguished points and an axis of rotation. The ball of superfluid has to conserve momentum.It's just the similarities in both cases. Superfluid flows from higher level to lower level place even when there is a barrier between them. I'm still curious how tall the barrier could be until the super fluid can no longer overcome it.
Thus, even for an arbitrarily small velocity of rotation, an infinite number of layers occur