Laser-Blasted Plasma Is Cooler Than Deep Space…Literally

https://www.space.com/42909-plasma-cooled-with-lasers.html


Rice University physicists reported the first laser-cooled neutral plasma, a breakthrough that could lead to simulators for exotic states of matter that occur at the center of Jupiter or white dwarf stars.

Credit: Brandon Martin/Rice University


Researchers who make the coldest plasmas in the universe just found a way to make them even colder — by blasting them with lasers.


The scientists cooled the plasma to around 50-thousandths of a degree above absolute zero, about 50 times colder than in deep space.


This chilly plasma could reveal how similar plasmas behave at the centers of white dwarf stars and deep in the core of gas planets like our cosmic neighbor, Jupiter, researchers reported in a new study. [The Biggest Unsolved Mysteries in Physics]


Plasma is a type of gas, but it’s different enough to be recognized as one of the four fundamental states of matter (alongside gas, liquid and solid). In plasma, a significant number of electrons have been separated from their atoms, creating a state where free electrons zip around ions, or atoms that have either a positive or negative charge.


Temperatures in naturally occurring plasma are typically very high; for example, plasma on the surface of the sun seethes at  3.5 million degrees Fahrenheit (2 million degrees Celsius). By cooling plasma, scientists can make more detailed observations in order to better understand its behavior under extreme conditions, like those roiling our gas giant neighbors.


Be more chill


So why use lasers to help the plasma chill out?


“The laser cooling takes advantage of the fact that light has momentum,” lead study author Thomas Killian, a professor of physics and astronomy at Rice University in Texas, told Live Science. “If I have an ion in the plasma and I have a laser beam scattering light off that ion, every time that ion scatters a photon it gets a push in the direction of the laser beam,” Killian said.


This means that if a laser beam opposes the ion’s natural motion, every time the ion scatters light it loses some momentum, which slows it down.


“It’s like walking uphill or in molasses,” he said.


For their experiments, Killian and his colleagues produced small amounts of neutral plasma — plasma with a relatively equal number of positive and negative charges — vaporizing strontium metal and then ionizing the cloud. The plasma dissipated in less than 100 millionths of a second, which didn’t leave the scientists much time to cool it down before it disappeared. For the laser cooling to work, they needed to precool the plasma, slowing the ions down even more. In the end, the resulting plasma was about four times colder than any that had ever been created before, the study authors reported.

Tom Langin, a doctoral candidate at Rice University, makes an adjustment to an experiment that uses 10 lasers of varying wavelengths to laser-cool ions in a neutral plasma.

Credit: Brandon Martin/Rice University


Assembling the pieces needed to generate highly cooled plasma took about 20 years, though the experiments themselves lasted less than a fraction of a second — and there were thousands upon thousands of experiments performed, Killian said.


“When we create a plasma it only lives for a couple hundred microseconds. Every ‘make a plasma, laser-cool it, look and see what happened’ is less than a millisecond,” he said. “It takes days and days to actually build up enough data to say, ‘Ah, this is how the plasma is behaving.'”


Going colder


The study’s findings invite plenty of questions about how ultracold plasma may interact with energy and matter; finding answers could help to create more accurate models of white dwarf stars and gas giant planets, which have plasma deep in their interiors that behaves similarly to the plasma cooled in the lab.


“We need better models of those systems so we can understand planet formation,” Killian said. “This is the first time that we’ve had a tabletop experiment in which we can actually measure things to feed into those models.”


Creating plasma that’s even colder may also be within reach, which could further transform scientists’ understanding of how this mysterious form of matter behaves, Killian told Live Science.


“If we can cool it another order of magnitude, we can can get close to predictions of where the plasma may actually become a solid — but a bizarre solid 10 times less dense than any solid that people have ever made,” Killian said.


“That would be very, very exciting,” he added.


The findings were published online Thursday (Jan. 3) in the journal Science.


Original article on Live Science.

via Space.com https://www.space.com

January 7, 2019 at 06:39AM

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