Tag

Phase Transition

All articles tagged with #phase transition

science5 months ago

Superheated Gold Surpasses Melting Point Without Melting, Defying Physics

Researchers successfully superheated solid gold to over 14 times its melting point for a brief moment, bypassing the entropy catastrophe limit, which could lead to new insights into phase transitions and material production. Using ultrafast laser heating on nanoscale gold films, they achieved this extreme state without the usual structural breakdown, opening possibilities for advanced material manipulation.

astronomy1 year ago

"The Fate of the Universe: From Beginning to End"

The question of whether the end of our Universe will mirror its beginning through a new Big Bang triggered by dark energy remains unanswered. Cosmic inflation, which set up the hot Big Bang, ended in a second-order phase transition, while vacuum decay scenarios rely on first-order phase transitions, suggesting fundamental differences. Although dark energy and inflation may be related, any discussion of a future vacuum decay scenario remains speculative, with no evidence to validate it. The possibility of such a scenario occurring is open, but firmly in the realm of pure speculation at this point.

physics2 years ago

Unveiling the Secrets of Spin-Orbit Coupled Bose-Einstein Condensates

Researchers from the University of California, Santa Barbara, have discovered a spin microemulsion phase in two-dimensional systems of spinor Bose-Einstein condensates. This phase transition is characterized by the loss of superfluidity, complex pseudospin textures, and the emergence of topological defects. The spin microemulsion phase occurs when the motion of each atom is coupled to its internal spin state, resulting in a spin-orbit coupling effect. The findings provide insights into the behavior of two-dimensional systems and have implications for both quantum physics and soft matter systems. Future research will focus on investigating the thermodynamic stability of the spin microemulsion and its response to different system parameters.

physics2 years ago

Unobservable Quantum Phase Transition Observed by Physicists

Physicists have successfully observed and measured an "unobservable" quantum phase transition, thanks to advancements in quantum computing. Using clever techniques and the brute-force power of quantum computers, researchers were able to detect and study the entanglement structure of chains of qubits, providing evidence for the existence of entanglement filling the chain. This breakthrough has sparked interest in the role of measurements in generating new phenomena and has opened up new possibilities for manipulating and supercharging entangled states of quantum matter.

science-and-technology2 years ago

"Unveiling Ancient Anarchists, Filthy Tycoons, and a Revolutionary State of Matter"

This week's Phys.org highlights include the discovery of an ancient water management system in China built without centralized authority, the detection of a hidden phase of matter that separates supercooled liquids from normal liquids, the New Horizons spacecraft measuring the darkness of the universe, extreme coral reef bleaching off southeast Florida due to rising ocean temperatures, and a study showing that the top 10% of wealth holders in the US are responsible for 40% of carbon emissions, suggesting that the tax code could be used to address climate change.

science2 years ago

Unveiling the Enigmatic Liquid-Solid Phase Transition: Scientists' Theoretical Breakthrough

Scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have proposed a theory explaining the molecular behavior of supercooled liquids, which represents a hidden phase transition between a liquid and a solid. The researchers found that at a certain temperature called the onset temperature, the molecules in supercooled liquids become so viscous that they barely move, resulting in a transition from a liquid-like state to a solid-like state. This improved understanding could aid in the development of new amorphous materials for various applications.

science2 years ago

The Standard Model of Cosmology at Risk Due to Broken Symmetry

The electroweak horizon is a problem that has been known for a long time, but which simply has not gotten the kind of attention that the cosmic microwave background radiation attracted. The electroweak field is symmetric when the cosmic temperature is high, and as the separate electromagnetic and weak fields take form, that symmetry is broken. However, no one has found any cosmic strings or any other evidence for the different regions of electroweak symmetry breaking, which is why it is included in the list of cosmology's crises.