Superconductor Research Points To New Phase of Matter 59
unil_1005 writes "Scientists have found the strongest evidence yet that a puzzling gap in the electronic structures of some high-temperature superconductors could indicate a new phase of matter. Understanding this 'pseudogap' has been a 20-year quest for researchers who are trying to control and improve these breakthrough materials, with the ultimate goal of finding superconductors that operate at room temperature. 'Our findings point to management and control of this other phase as the correct path toward optimizing these novel superconductors for energy applications, as well as searching for new superconductors,' said Zhi-Xun Shen of the Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Science."
Boring. (Score:3, Funny)
It don't matter to me.
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(Think about it again, slowly this time)
Woosh! (Score:1)
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Apriciate Jam ROCKS!
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We don't appreciate it because it was lame.
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What about Bose Einstein Condensate? (Score:3)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bose%E2%80%93Einstein_condensate
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There are lots and lots of phases of matter, the 3 (or maybe 4 depending on your teacher) that you learned about in elementary science classes are just the most common.
That's because... (Score:4, Funny)
They're the only phases that matter.
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Wow, thanks for that explanation through demonstration.
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That's the phase that pays!
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just to name the ones i've heard of (through being nothing more than someone who pays attention but without any real interest)
solid
liquid crystal (yes like in watch displays)
liquid
gas
plasma
aside from the liquid crystal (it's a different phase or some such cos it's not the space between the molecules but rather the alignment of the molecules which determine if it's currently solid or liquid) i always liked how science has basically said the world is made of four things; earth, water, air and fire...
oh and as
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A zero-friction liquid is a superfluid, not a Bose-Einstein condensate. Both superfluids and BEC are distinct phases of matter, though. Simply sharing some properties with another phase is insufficient -- otherwise liquid and gas wouldn't be distinct phases.
Re:What about Bose Einstein Condensate? (Score:5, Funny)
Wouldn't that make a zero-friction liquid, superfluous?
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Wouldn't that make a zero-friction liquid, superfluous?
badump-ch!
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Don't mean to rayn on your parade, but I didn't know if you intended that as a physics pun or not. "Fluous" sounds like "fluidity," the reciprocal of viscosity; super-fluidity is sub-viscosity. While it means something else in this case, "fluous" does come from the French fluere, to flow. So, was it on pour poise?
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4th? How about 6th? Or 7th? (Score:1)
I thought plasma, bose-einsten condensate and quark-gluon plasmas were all recognised as seperate states of matter?
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Re:4th? How about 6th? Or 7th? (Score:5, Informative)
Plasma is the fourth "common" phase of matter.
Bose-Einstein condensates and other novel phase are also phases, but aren't exhibited in all materials.
For that matter, most solids, particularly crystalline solids, have many different phases that correspond to different crystalline structures.
Also, "liquid" and "gas" aren't always distinct phases.
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These are supercritical fluids. If i'm not mistaken, oxygen is one at room temperature. A typical gas to liquid phase transition involves a discontinuity in the density of the fluid with rising pressure and constant temperature; supercritical fluids fail to exhibit this behavior for all pressures at a temperature above the critical point. More interesting, however, is what happens right around the critical point. Specifically, the free energy difference between the gas and liquid phases (just below the
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Sorry, it took me a while to notice this response.
I'm forgetting a lot of my thermodynamics terminology, but the type of thermodynamic change between a solid phase and either of the fluid phases is different than the thermodynamic change between the two fluid phases (liquid and gas). You can intuitively see this, since the solid phase (for crystalline things) has a symmetry change and a fundamental change in how the system is ordered. Liquid and gas phases are very similar, except that particles are a lot c
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Solid
Liquid
Critical state
Supercritical matter
Gas
Plasma
Liquid crystal
Glass
Bose-Einstein condensate
Fermionic condensate
Rydberg molecule
Superfluid
Quark-Gluon plasma
Probably a few others. And now pseudogap.
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There are also liquid crystal phases. Basically, ordered liquids.
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And its name is JESUS
There is only one phase of matter and its name is...
CHUCK NORRIS
What? Another one? (Score:1)
Aren't there, like, 14 now?
My prediction... (Score:2)
This... (Score:2)