Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,492,440 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Extreme matter: mother of all material flows into view.


When matter was new in the universe, it was an exotic gas whose components later congealed into the more-ordinary matter made of atoms. At least, that was the story. Now, physicists trying to re-create that gas in an accelerator say that the universe's original stuff appears to have been a liquid.

Like the gas that had been expected, the ur-liquid the physicists made is ultrahot and ultradense--up to 150,000 times as hot as the sun's core and 100 times as dense as ordinary atomic nuclei.

It's essentially a sample of primordial matter from the explosive birth of the universe, Samuel Aronson of Brookhaven Brookhaven.

1 City (1990 pop. 10,243), seat of Lincoln co., SW Miss.; inc. 1859. It is situated in a dairy, timber, and farm area. Oil and gas fields are nearby. The city's manufactures include wood products, apparel, lumber, wire cloth, and asphalt.

2 Town (1990 pop. 407,779), Suffolk co., SE N.Y., on E Long Island.
 National Laboratory in Upton, N.Y., said at a press conference Monday in Tampa, Fla., at a meeting of the American Physical Society. "We think we're looking at a phenomenon last seen in the universe more than 13 billion years ago," he says.

Such material presumably permeated the universe during the first microseconds after the Big Bang. Then, it cooled and differentiated into a host of particles, including the protons and neutrons in all the matter that now exists (SN: 8/26/00,p. 136). The finding that it might have been a liquid could influence cosmological models of how the universe evolved, adds Dmitri E. Kharzeev, head of Brookhaven's theory group.

Scientists refer to the original material, predicted to be a gas, as the quark-gluon gluon, an elementary particle that mediates, or carries, the strong, or nuclear, force. In quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the quantum field theory of strong interactions, the interaction of quarks (to form protons, neutrons, and other elementary particles) is described in terms of gluons—so called because they "glue" the quarks together. Gluons are massless, travel at the speed of light, and possess a property called color. plasma. Quarks are the building blocks of protons, neutrons, and more-exotic entities, whereas gluons are massless particles that glue together quarks.

For more than 20 years, scientists in Europe and the United States have used accelerators to search for the quark-gluon plasma (SN: 2/19/00, p. 117). Since it began operating in 2000, only Brookhaven's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, or RHIC RHIC - Radiation Hardened Integrated Circuit
RHIC - Radio Hypnotic Intracerebral Control
RHIC - Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (Brookhaven National Lab)
, has been employed in this quest. The new analysis relies on 2000-2003 data.

To make a quark-gluon plasma, RHIC physicists slam together gold ions accelerated to nearly the speed of light. The protons and neutrons of the colliding ions transform into energy, out of which quarks and gluons emerge, the RHIC scientists say.

"They've found a system of quarks and gluons that's very different from normal nuclear matter," says Joseph Kapusta of the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.

What's more, the quarks and gluons that the RHIC has been producing for years undergo collisions, interactions, and motions more characteristic of liquids than of gases, Aronson reports. Although some evidence of liquid behavior in the RHIC-made matter had been recognized for years, scientists gripped by long-standing theoretical predictions of a gas or plasma were slow to give it credence (SN: 6/21/03, p. 387).

"What we've struggled with is that it's not quite the quark-gluon plasma that we had predicted," says Brookhaven's Thomas W. Ludlam.

However, that resistance has largely melted. Four reports representing the consensus of RHIC researchers on the newly identified liquid state will appear in an upcoming Nuclear Physics nuclear physics, study of the components, structure, and behavior of the nucleus of the atom. It is especially concerned with the nature of matter and with nuclear energy. A. They follow more than a year of vigorous debate, mainly between theorists convinced that the quark-gluon plasma had been found and experimentalists wary that other interpretations of the data were still possible.

Scientists are eagerly awaiting future experiments that will determine specific properties of the newfound liquid state, such as its viscosity, temperature, and heat capacity heat capacity or thermal capacity, ratio of the change in heat energy of a unit mass of a substance to the change in temperature of the substance; like its melting point or boiling point, the heat capacity is a characteristic of a substance. The measurement of heat and heat capacity is called calorimetry., says Kapusta.

Even though the RHIC scientists have become hesitant to identify the universe's first matter as a plasma, they're mum on what a new label might be.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 23, 2005
Words:569
Previous Article:Pressure point.(Letter to the Editor)
Next Article:Distant dust: asteroid belt or boiling comet?
Topics:



Related Articles
Circuit overload taxes ingenuity of phone company line monitors. (Pacific Bell's telephone network management)(Special Report: Telecommunications)
Computer model captures missing matter.(computer simulations seem to show that baryons are present but hidden)
Mothers exert more influence on timing of first intercourse among daughters than among sons. (Digests).
Expand hate crimes bill.(Editorials)(Gordon Smith gains influential ally in Senate)(Editorial)
'TARNATION' A HOME MOVIE LIKE NO OTHER.(U)
EDITORIAL FRAGILE EARTH.(Editorial)(Editorial)
What did Jesus do? Bush wins, and the Left cries 'Eek' at religion.
Morality and convenience abortions.(EDITORIAL COMMENT)
eXtreme Project Management.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles