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Abstract

When an incident wave scatters off 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. 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 for 3.70 Hz waves, in a 6.25-cm-deep fluid, consistent with the superradiant scattering caused by rapid rotation. We expect our experimental findings to be relevant to black-hole physics, since shallow water waves scattering on a draining fluid constitute an analogue of a black hole, as well as to hydrodynamics, due to the close relation to over-reflection instabilities.

Details

Title
Rotational superradiant scattering in a vortex flow
Author
Torres, Theo; Patrick, Sam; Coutant, Antonin; Richartz, Maurício; Tedford, Edmund W; Weinfurtner, Silke
Pages
833-836
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Sep 2017
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
17452473
e-ISSN
17452481
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1935243863
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Sep 2017