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Bunches of atoms madly morph. (Physics).


Minuscule clusters of atoms don't hold their shapes as well as hold-in-your-hand solids do. Understanding such instability is a growing priority as circuits, machines, and other structures shrink to atomic scales (SN: 2/15/03, p. 110).

Now, using ultrafast lasers, physicists at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville have observed that clusters randomly morph between different arrangements, or isomers isomers (ī´sōmurz),
n.pl 1. organic compounds having the same empirical formula–i.e.
, many times within a nanosecond (1) One billionth of a second. Used to measure the speed of logic and memory chips, a nanosecond can be visualized by converting it to distance. In one nanosecond, electricity travels approximately a foot in a wire. .

In the Feb. 14 Physical Review Letters Physical Review Letters is one of the most prestigious journals in physics.[1] Since 1958, it has been published by the American Physical Society as an outgrowth of The Physical Review. , Andrew J. Dally and Louis A. Bloomfield report rapid cycling among three isomers--a cube, a ladder, and a ring--by seven-atom dusters of cesium iodide iodide /io·dide/ (i´o-did) a binary compound of iodine.

i·o·dide
n.
A compound of iodine with a more electropositive element or group.
 salt.

To focus on suspected shape-shifting by dusters, the Charlottesville team repeatedly condensed cesium iodide vapor in cooler helium gas to form a stream containing hundreds of dusters.

The researchers then zapped the duster stream with a laser pulse strong enough to shatter only the cubic clusters and waited up to a nanosecond for subsequent shape changes to take place among the remaining isomers. Then the scientists measured the proportions of all three isomers in the stream to see whether some of the other isomers changed into cubic ones.

By overlaying thousands of such measurements, Dally and Bloomfield say they have demonstrated that shape changes indeed take place and that those transformations recur at extremely brief intervals of tens to hundreds of trillionths of a second.

Shiv shiv  
n. Slang
A knife, razor, or other sharp or pointed implement, especially one used as a weapon.



[Probably Romany chiv, blade.]

Noun 1.
 N. Khanna of Virginia Commonwealth University Formed by a merger between the Richmond Professional Institute and the Medical College of Virginia in 1968, VCU has a medical school that is home to the nation's oldest organ transplant program.  in Richmond calls the new results "a very important contribution" Besides verifying theoretical predictions, he says, the findings may also help researchers figure out how to select and stabilize isomers with desirable traits for use as nanometer-scale building blocks for novel structures.--P.W.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 15, 2003
Words:273
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