Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2025 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $70,842
87%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 87%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: superfluid

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Video: Chandra Captures the First Direct Evidence of Superfluids at the Heart of Neutron Stars

    02/27/2011 5:08:43 PM PST · by SunkenCiv · 10 replies
    Popular Science ^ | February 24, 2011 | Clay Dillow
    Superfluids are strange states of matter, typically forming at very low and very high temperatures, exhibiting gonzo properties like a seemingly gravity-defying tendency to climb up the walls of containers and friction-free superconductivity. That is, they are perfect conductors that don't lose energy during transmission. And the fact that they appear to exist at the center of neutron stars tells scientists a lot about nuclear interactions in high-density matter and the life-cycles of neutron stars. The pressure within neutron stars is so intense that in the stars' cores, charged particles merge, resulting in a star mostly consisting of neutrons (hence...
  • New Type of Matter Discovered! (Strange Stars? Odd features hint at novel matter)

    04/26/2002 5:29:05 PM PDT · by vannrox · 6 replies · 462+ views
    Science News ^ | Week of April 20, 2002; Vol. 161, No. 16 | Peter Weiss
    Strange Stars? Odd features hint at novel matter Peter Weiss Exotic forms of matter never observed before in the wild may have turned up in the remnants of two collapsed stars, according to new findings publicized last week by NASA. At an April 10 briefing at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C., researchers argued that observations by the orbiting Chandra X-Ray Observatory indicate that the astronomical object dubbed RXJ1856.5-3754 may lack the neutrons, protons, and electrons of ordinary matter. Another object, 3C58, may contain odd forms of matter surrounded by neutrons. Since its discovery in 1996, astronomers had thought that RXJ1856...
  • Probable Discovery of a New, Supersolid, Phase of Matter

    01/14/2004 12:29:21 PM PST · by AdmSmith · 50 replies · 427+ views
    Penn State Univ ^ | 14 jan 2004 | pressrelease
    14 January 2004--In the 15 January 2004 issue of the journal Nature, two physicists from Penn State University will announce their discovery of a new phase of matter, a "supersolid" form of helium-4 with the extraordinary frictionless-flow properties of a superfluid. "We discovered that solid helium-4 appears to behave like a superfluid when it is so cold that the laws of quantum mechanics govern its behavior," says Moses H. W. Chan, Evan Pugh Professor of Physics at Penn State. "We apparently have observed, for the first time, a solid material with the characteristics of a superfluid." "The possible discovery of...
  • Pitt Researchers Create New Form of Matter

    05/20/2007 9:09:29 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 12 replies · 341+ views
    University of Pittsburgh ^ | May 17, 2007 | Morgan Kelly
    The new state is a solid filled with a collection of energy particles known as polaritons that have been trapped and slowed, explained lead investigator David Snoke, an associate professor in the physics and astronomy department in Pitt's School of Arts and Sciences. Snoke worked with Pitt graduate students Ryan Balili and Vincent Hartwell on the project. Using specially designed optical structures with nanometer-thick layers-which allow polaritons to move freely inside the solid-Snoke and his colleagues captured the polaritons in the form of a superfluid. In superfluids and in their solid counterparts, superconductors, matter consolidates to act as a single...
  • Superfluid helium-4 whistles just the right tune

    01/20/2006 8:09:35 PM PST · by strategofr · 52 replies · 1,159+ views
    UCBerkeley News ^ | | 27 January 2005 | Robert Sanders
    BERKELEY – University of California, Berkeley, physicists can now tune in to and hear normally inaudible quantum vibrations, called quantum whistles, enabling them to build very sensitive detectors of rotation or very precise gyroscopes. Quantum whistle Hear the synchronized vibrations from a chorus of more than 4,000 nano-whistles, created when physicists pushed superfluid helium-4 though an array of nanometer-sized holes. Note that the pitch drops as the pressure drops. A quantum whistle is a peculiar characteristic of supercold condensed fluids, in this case superfluid helium-4, which vibrate when you try to push them through a tiny hole. Richard Packard, professor...
  • Whirling atoms dance into physics textbooks [Friction-free superfluid]

    06/25/2005 7:05:30 AM PDT · by Excuse_My_Bellicosity · 6 replies · 485+ views
    Spaceflight Now ^ | June 24, 2005 | NASA/JPL
    NASA-funded researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass., have created a new form of superfluid matter. This research may lead to improved superconducting materials, useful for energy-efficient electricity transport and better medical diagnostic tools. The research marks the first time scientists have positively created a friction-free superfluid using a gas of fermionic atoms, atoms with an odd number of electrons, protons and neutrons. The breakthrough happened on the night of April 13. "It's a night I won't forget. It was overwhelming to watch on our computers as the lithium atoms behaved in a way that no one had...