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| subject: | PNU 761 |
PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News Number 761 January 11, 2006 by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein BEST DIRECT TEST OF E=mc^2. Albert Einstein's formulation of how matter and energy are equivalent is an important enunciation of the principle of conserved energy. As far as we know, it is at work at the moment an atom bomb explodes, when the fissioning of uranium is exploited for making commercial electricity, or when an electron and positron annihilate inside a PET scanner. A new experiment---conducted by scientists from MIT, Universite Laval, Florida State, Oxford, NIST, and Institut Laue-Langevin---keeps careful account of both matter mass and electromagnetic energy for a process in which ions of sulphur and silicon absorb neutrons, transforming them into new isotopes as they emit gamma rays. In this transaction Einstein's equation is shown experimentally to be true at a level of 0.00004%, a factor of 55 better than the previous best test. (Rainville et al., Nature, 22/29 December 2005.) EXTRASOLAR PLANETS IN BINARY STAR SYSTEMS were, at first, unexpected since it was thought that the presence of a second or even third star would disrupt the formation of a planet in the first place. But then why have 30 such exoplanets been found in double and triple star groupings? Moreover, some of the planets detected reside in systems where the companion stars are not far away but actually rather close in---tens of astronomical units (one AU equals the Earth-Sun distance) or less. At this week's meeting of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) in Washington, DC, Alan Boss argued that the presence of a second star, far from disrupting the formation of planets around the first star from diffuse matter, can actually enhance the enterprise. Boss, an astronomer at the Carnegie Institution, said that the cross-gravitational forces operating in a multiple-star system can in some cases, through the process of shock heating, trigger a faster development of dense spiral arms in which gas and dust clumping can lead to planets. Since an estimated two thirds of all stars in the Milky Way reside in complex groupings, Boss asserted that a theory allowing for matter agglomeration in such places would greatly increase the number of suitable targets for exoplanet hunters. (Images at http://www.dtm.ciw.edu/boss/ftp/binary/ ) EXTENDED RED EMISSION (or ERE), a mysterious astronomical effect in which regions of diffuse red light are observed in planetary nebulae and in the galactic halo, comes from nanodiamonds in space. So say Huan-Cheng Chang and his colleagues at the Academia Sinica in Taiwan. At the AAS meeting, they reported the results of a recent experiment. As they suspected that ERE was analogous to the operation of a fluorescent lamp---where ultraviolet light is converted into visible light when it strikes a coating inside the lamp tube. In the experiment, nanometer-sized diamonds, first filled with defects by hitting the diamonds with a powerful proton beam, then heated to a temperature of 800 C to create conditions roughly matching those of space. When yellow and blue light was shone on the nanodiamonds, ERE-type luminescence resulted. The diamonds presumably would have been made in the vicinity of carbon-rich stellar zones. One example of such emission, in the proto-planetary nebula HD 44179, also called "The Red Rectangle,"can be seen at http://www.iras.ucalgary.ca/~kwok/aas207/ . Further discussion of the Red Rectangle was provided by Boston University astronomer Kenneth Brecher (see http://lite.bu.edu/vision/applets/Lightness/Pyramid/Pyramid.html ) SHOCK-PRODUCED COHERENT LIGHT. Physicists at MIT and Livermore National Lab have discovered a new source of coherent radiation distinct from traditional lasers and free-electron lasers; they propose to build a device in which coherent photons are produced by sending shock waves through a crystal. The result would be coherent light resembling the radiation issuing from a laser; but the mechanism of light production would not be stimulated emission, as it is in a laser, but rather the concerted motion of row after row of atoms in the target crystal. The passing shock front, set in motion by a projectile or laser blast, successively excites a huge density wave in the crystal; the atoms, returning to their original places in the matrix, emit light coherently, mostly in the THz wavelength band. Although sources of coherent light in this part of the electromagnetic spectrum have developed in recent years, it is still a difficult task. The next step will be to carry out an experimental test of the shock-wave light production. This work will be performed at two national labs---Livermore and Los Alamos. According to Evan Reed (who moved from MIT to Livermore, reed23{at}llnl.gov) the first likely application of coherent radiation will be as a diagnostic for understanding shock waves. The radiation should provide information about shock speed and the degree of crystallinity (Reed et al., Physical Review Letters, 13 January 2006) ---* Origin: Big Bang (1:106/2000.7) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 @PATH: 106/2000 633/267 |
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