Superglass

A superglass is a phase of matter which is characterized by superfluidity and a frozen amorphous structure at the same time.[1] J.C. Séamus Davis theorised that frozen helium-4 (at 0.2 K and 50 atm) may be a superglass.[1][2][3]This physics-related article is a stub.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
phase of mattersuperfluidityamorphoushelium-4BibcodeWayback MachineStates of matterLiquidSupercritical fluidPlasmaBose–Einstein condensateFermionic condensateDegenerate matterQuantum HallRydberg matterStrange matterSuperfluidSupersolidPhotonic moleculeQCD matterQuark–gluon plasmaColor-glass condensateColloidCrystalLiquid crystalTime crystalQuantum spin liquidExotic matterProgrammable matterDark matterAntimatterAntiferromagnetFerrimagnetFerromagnetString-net liquidPhase transitionsBoilingBoiling pointCondensationCritical lineCritical pointCrystallizationDepositionEvaporationFlash evaporationFreezingChemical ionizationIonizationLambda pointMeltingMelting pointRecombinationRegelationSaturated fluidSublimationSupercoolingTriple pointVaporizationVitrificationEnthalpy of fusionEnthalpy of sublimationEnthalpy of vaporizationLatent heatLatent internal energyTrouton's ruleVolatilityBaryonic matterBinodalCompressed fluidCooling curveEquation of stateLeidenfrost effectMacroscopic quantum phenomenaMpemba effectOrder and disorder (physics)SpinodalSuperconductivitySuperheated vaporSuperheatingThermo-dielectric effectphysics