Physics, asked by ashishjyadav5295, 1 year ago

At the lambda point, why does specific heat capacity tend to infinity?

Answers

Answered by Sushank2003
0
The specific heat capacity is the energy required to raise the temperature of unity mass by 1K, if at the lambda point all the bosons occupy the lowest quantum state, shouldn’t the specific heat capacity be a finite number as it would not require infinite energy to increase the temperature of the superfluid if all the bosons are in the ground state, it would be easier to transfer energy to them
Answered by Anonymous
1

&lt;b&gt;<br />_____________❤️❤️❤️______________<br />✌️✌️___________⬇️____________✌️✌️_____________ur answer____________<br />____________✨✨✨✨_____________<br />The specific heat capacity is the energy required to raise the  of unity mass by 1K, if at the lambda point all the bosons occupy the lowest quantum state, shouldn't the specific heat capacity be a finite number as it would not requireinfinite energy to increase the temperature.<br />
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