Abstract

Thermodynamics of a one-component perfect fluid In the strict sense of the word, hydrodynamics describes the dynamical behaviour of a fluid. But sometimes the hydrodynamical approach refers to phenomenological theories dealing with various types of condensed media, such as solids, liquid crystals, superconductors, magnetically ordered systems and so on. Two important and interconnected features characterise the hydrodynamical description. • It refers to spatial and temporal scales much longer than any relevant microscopical scale of the medium under consideration. • It does not need the microscopical theory for derivation of dynamical equations but uses as a starting point a set of conservation laws and thermodynamical and symmetry properties of the medium under consideration. The latter feature gives us the possibility to study condensed matter without waiting for the moment when a closed self-consistent microscopical theory is developed. Sometimes it can be a long time to wait for such a moment. For example, one may recall the microscopical theory of fluid with strong interactions, or as the latest example the microscopical theory of high- T c superconductivity. In fact, the cases when the hydrodynamical description can be derived rigorously from the ‘first-principle’ theory are more the exceptions rather than the rule. Such exceptions include, for example, weakly non-ideal gases and weak-coupling superconductors. Even if it is possible to derive the hydrodynamical description from the microscopical theory, the former as based on the most global properties (conservation laws and symmetry) is a reliable check of the microscopical theory. If hydrodynamics does not follow from a microscopical theory this is an alarming signal of potential problems with the microscopical theory. Impressive evidence of the fruitfulness of the hydrodynamical (phenomenological) approach to condensed matter physics is provided by the volumes of Landau and Lifshitz's course addressing continuous media: Electrodynamics of Continuous Media, Theory of Elasticity , and Fluid Mechanics (Landau and Lifshitz, 1984, 1986, 1987). The hydrodynamical approach was very fruitful also for studying properties of rotating superfluids, as will be demonstrated in this book. The hydrodynamical description always deals with the continuous medium even if the medium under consideration is a lattice (an atomic lattice in elasticity theory, for example). Indeed, the lattice constant is a microscopical scale which should be ignored in accordance with the nature of the hydrodynamical description.

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