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This String Theory "Star" Looks And Acts Exactly Like a Black Hole – ScienceAlert

Predicted over a century ago as monstrous concentrations of mass that torture the fabric of the Universe into traps of light and information, black holes are now established as objects of fact.

But might every distortion of light we now come across be a certified concentration of infinite density, or should we leave room for the possibility that other exotic breeds of cosmic oddity might look uncannily like a hole in space as well?

Using mathematical modeling preserved for string theory, a trio of physicists from Johns Hopkins University in the US found some objects that look like black holes from afar might be something else entirely up close: a new type of hypothetical exotic star called a topological soliton.

Given string theory is a hypothesis begging for a means to be tested, these strange objects exist only on paper, floating about in the realm of pure mathematics. At least, as far as we know. But even as a theoretical construct, they could help us one day distinguish the true black holes from impostors.

"How would you tell when you don't have a black hole? We don't have a good way to test that," says physicist Ibrahima Bah. "Studying hypothetical objects like topological solitons will help us figure that out."

Black holes are arguably the most mysterious known objects in the Universe. Heck, we didn't even have concrete confirmation of their existence until the first detection of gravitational waves in 2015, less than 10 years ago. That's because black holes are so dense that their gravity warps the space-time around them to such a degree that, within a certain distance known as the event horizon, nothing in the Universe is fast enough to achieve escape velocity. Not even light in a vacuum.

This means that black holes emit no light we can currently detect, making them, well, invisible; and, since light is the main tool in our kit for understanding the Universe, we can really only learn about them by studying the space around them.

The black hole itself is mathematically described as a one-dimensional point of infinite density something which itself doesn't really equate anything meaningful in physics.

But we can also imagine other bizarre manifestations of physics behaving in a similar way. One example is boson stars, hypothetical objects that are transparent and therefore invisible, just like black holes.

Now, the small group led by physicist Pierre Heidmann has found that topological solitons represent another. These are sort of gravitational kinks in four-dimensional space-time predicted by string theory, in which the smallest elements of the Universe are not pixel-like points, but tiny vibrating strings.

From a distance, the area surrounding these kinks doesn't stand out as all that unusual. Up close, however, the topology of space is heavily distorted.

The team constructed their topological soliton mathematically, and then plugged their equations into simulations to see how it would behave. They overlaid the simulations over real pictures of space to get the most accurate understanding of how their construct would behave.

From a distance, the topological soliton looked exactly like a black hole, with light appearing to be swallowed.

At closer proximity, however, the topological soliton got weird. It didn't capture light as a black hole would at all, but scrambled it and re-emitted it.

"Light is strongly bent, but instead of being absorbed like it would in a black hole, it scatters in funky motions until at one point it comes back to you in a chaotic manner," Heidmann says. "You don't see a dark spot. You see a lot of blur, which means light is orbiting like crazy around this weird object."

String theory is an attempt to resolve a long and vexing tension in physics: between quantum mechanics, which describes how things behave on very small scales, and general relativity, which describes the larger scales. Quantum mechanics breaks down on relativity scales, and vice versa, which bothers physicists no end, because they should be able to play together nicely.

A unified theory of the two, what we call quantum gravity, has proven elusive. The topological soliton is the first string-theory based object that corresponds to the behavior of a black hole, demonstrating that quantum gravity objects can be used to describe real-world physics.

"These are the first simulations of astrophysically relevant string theory objects, since we can actually characterize the differences between a topological soliton and a black hole as if an observer was seeing them in the sky," Heidmann explains.

We don't expect to see them in the sky, obviously, but probing the possibilities could help scientists better understand the tension between quantum mechanics and general relativity, in the hope of one day bringing us to a resolution.

"It's the start of a wonderful research program," Bah says. "We hope in the future to be able to genuinely propose new types of ultracompact stars consisting of new kinds of matter from quantum gravity."

The research has been accepted in Physical Review D.

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D-Wave Demonstrates First-Ever Coherent Quantum Spin Glass … – HPCwire

BURNABY, British Columbia and PALO ALTO, Calif., April 19, 2023 D-Wave Quantum Inc., a leader in quantum computing systems, software, and servicesand the only provider building both annealing and gate-model quantum computers, today published a peer-reviewed milestone paper showing the performance of its 5,000 qubit Advantage quantum computer is significantly faster than classical compute on 3D spin glass optimization problems, an intractable class of optimization problems. This paper also represents the largest programmable quantum simulation reported to date.

The papera collaboration between scientists from D-Wave and Boston Universityentitled Quantum critical dynamics in a 5,000-qubit programmable spin glass, was published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature today and is available here. Building upon research conducted on up to 2,000 qubits last September, the study shows that the D-Wave quantum processor can compute coherent quantum dynamics in large-scale optimization problems. This work was done using D-Waves commercial-grade annealing-based quantum computer, which is accessible for customers to use today.

With immediate implications to optimization, the findings show that coherent quantum annealing can improve solution quality faster than classical algorithms. The observed speedup matches the theory of coherent quantum annealing and shows a direct connection between coherence and the core computational power of quantum annealing.

This research marks a significant achievement for quantum technology, as it demonstrates a computational advantage over classical approaches for an intractable class of optimization problems, said Dr. Alan Baratz, CEO of D-Wave. For those seeking evidence of quantum annealings unrivaled performance, this work offers definitive proof.

This work supports D-Waves ongoing commitment to relentless scientific innovation and product delivery, as the company continues development on its future annealing and gate model quantum computers. To date, D-Wave has brought to market five generations of quantum computers and launched an experimental prototype of its sixth-generation machine, the Advantage2 system, in June 2022. The full Advantage2 system is expected to feature 7,000+ qubits, 20-way connectivity and higher coherence to solve even larger and more complex problems. Read more about the research in our Medium post here.

Papers Authors and Leading Industry Voices Echo Support

This is an important advance in the study of quantum phase transitions on quantum annealers. It heralds a revolution in experimental many-body physics and bodes well for practical applications of quantum computing, said Wojciech Zurek, theoretical physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and leading authority on quantum theory. Dr. Zurek is widely renowned for his groundbreaking contribution to our understanding of the early universe as well as condensed matter systems through the discovery of the celebrated Kibble-Zurek mechanism. This mechanism underpins the physics behind the experiment reported in this paper. The same hardware that has already provided useful experimental proving ground for quantum critical dynamics can be also employed to seek low-energy states that assist in finding solutions to optimization problems.

Disordered magnets, such as spin glasses, have long functioned as model systems for testing solvers of complex optimization problems, said Gabriel Aeppli, professor of physics at ETH Zrich and EPF Lausanne, and head of the Photon Science Division of the Paul Scherrer Institut. Professor Aeppli coauthored the first experimental paper demonstrating advantage of quantum annealing over thermal annealing in reaching ground state of disordered magnets. This paper gives evidence that the quantum dynamics of a dedicated hardware platform are faster than for known classical algorithms to find the preferred, lowest energy state of a spin glass, and so promises to continue to fuel the further development of quantum annealers for dealing with practical problems.

As a physicist who has built my career on computer simulations of quantum systems, it has been amazing to experience first-hand the transformative capabilities of quantum annealing devices, said Anders Sandvik, professor of physics at Boston University and a coauthor of the paper. This paper already demonstrates complex quantum dynamics on a scale beyond any classical simulation method, and Im very excited about the expected enhanced performance of future devices. I believe we are now entering an era when quantum annealing becomes an essential tool for research on complex systems.

This work marks a major step towards large-scale quantum simulations of complex materials, said Hidetoshi Nishimori, Professor, Institute of Innovative Research, Tokyo Institute of Technology and one of the original inventors of quantum annealing. We can now expect novel physical phenomena to be revealed by quantum simulations using quantum annealing, ultimately leading to the design of materials of significant societal value.

This represents some of the most important experimental work ever performed in quantum optimization, said Dr. Andrew King, director of performance research at D-Wave. Weve demonstrated a speedup over simulated annealing, in strong agreement with theory, providing high-quality solutions for large-scale problems. This work shows clear evidence of quantum dynamics in optimization, which we believe paves the way for even more complex problem-solving using quantum annealing in the future. The work exhibits a programmable realization of lab experiments that originally motivated quantum annealing 25 years ago.

Not only is this the largest demonstration of quantum simulation to date, but it also provides the first experimental evidence, backed by theory, that coherent quantum dynamics can accelerate the attainment of better solutions in quantum annealing, said Mohammad Amin, fellow, quantum algorithms and systems, at D-Wave. The observed speedup can be attributed to complex critical dynamics during quantum phase transition, which cannot be replicated by classical annealing algorithms, and the agreement between theory and experiment is remarkable. We believe these findings have significant implications for quantum optimization, with practical applications in addressing real-world problems.

About D-Wave Quantum Inc.

D-Wave (NYSE: QBTS) is a leader in the development and delivery of quantum computing systems, software, and services, and is the worlds first commercial supplier of quantum computersand the only company building both annealing quantum computers and gate-model quantum computers. Our mission is to unlock the power of quantum computing today to benefit business and society. We do this by delivering customer value with practical quantum applications for problems as diverse as logistics, artificial intelligence, materials sciences, drug discovery, scheduling, cybersecurity, fault detection, and financial modeling. D-Waves technology is being used by some of the worlds most advanced organizations, including Volkswagen, Mastercard, Deloitte, Davidson Technologies, ArcelorMittal, Siemens Healthineers, Unisys, NEC Corporation, Pattison Food Group Ltd., DENSO, Lockheed Martin, Forschungszentrum Jlich, University of Southern California, and Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Source: D-Wave

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ORNLs Lupini elected fellow of the Microscop – EurekAlert

image:ORNL scientist Andrew Lupini has been named a Fellow of the Microscopy Society of America. view more

Credit: Genevieve Martin, ORNL/U.S. Dept. of Energy

Andrew Lupini, a scientist and inventor at the Department of Energys Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has been elected Fellow of the Microscopy Society of America.

MSA fellows are senior distinguished members who have made significant contributions to the advancement of microscopy and microanalysis through scientific achievement and service to the scientific community and the society. Lupini was one of only four scientists named an MSA Fellow this year.

Lupini was cited for foundational contribution of theory and practice of aberration correction STEM [scanning transmission electron microscopy], and applications for high-resolution EELS [electron energy loss spectroscopy] and e-beam atomic fabrication.

Karren More, director of ORNLs Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, also an MSA fellow, said, Andys contributions to the field of microscopy cannot be overstated. He is an exceptional and prolific scientist whose range of research spans microscopy to optics, quantum mechanics and nanotechnology. This is a well-deserved honor.

Lupini is a widely cited physicist and microscopist who earned his doctorate in physics from the Cavendish Laboratory of Cambridge University in the United Kingdom in 2001. Lupini is the leader of the Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy group at CNMS and is one of the inventors of the first aberration corrector in a scanning transmission electron microscope to demonstrate improved resolution.

ORNLs CNMS, a DOE Office of Science user facility, offers the national and international user community access to staff expertise and state-of-the-art equipment for a broad range of nanoscience research, including nanomaterials synthesis, nanofabrication, imaging, microscopy, characterization and theory-modeling simulation.

Lupinis research interests include all forms of electron microscopy and spectroscopy, especially as applied to new or quantum materials, including high energy-resolution EELS. He was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2021.

UT-Battelle manages ORNL for DOEs Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. The Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visitenergy.gov/science. Lawrence Bernard

Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

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The quantum spin liquid that isn’t one – Phys.org

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For two decades, it was believed that a possible quantum spin liquid was discovered in a synthetically produced material. In this case, it would not follow the laws of classical physics even on a macroscopic level, but rather those of the quantum world. There is great hope in these materials: they would be suitable for applications in quantum entangled information transmission (quantum cryptography) or even quantum computation.

Now, however, researchers from TU Wien and Toho University in Japan have shown that the promising material, -(BEDT-TTF)2Cu2(CN)3, is not the predicted quantum spin liquid, but a material that can be described using known concepts.

In their recent publication in the journal Nature Communications, the researchers report how they investigated the mysterious quantum state by measuring the electrical resistance in -(BEDT-TTF)2Cu2(CN)3 as a function of temperature and pressure. In 2021, Andrej Pustogow from the Institute of Solid State Physics at TU Wien has already investigated the magnetic properties of this material.

"Phase diagrams are the language of physics," says Pustogow, leading author of the current study. If you understand this language, a quick glance at the diagram shows how the properties of a material change depending on temperature and pressure. Water, for example, becomes solid at a temperature of 0C and gaseous at 100C. If you now change the pressure, for example by heating water in a pressure cooker, the boiling point increases to over 100C.

In order to now find out how the supposed quantum spin liquidi.e., a liquid in which the spins of the electrons can rotate freely and are quantum entangledbehaves under pressure, the research team carried out systematic resistance measurements. "The special thing is that the very shape of the phase boundary gives deep insights into the physics of magnetic quantum fluctuations, which actually can't be measured with electrical resistance per se," says Pustogow. This was only made possible by a method that is unique worldwide, which the Japanese partners used to study the material. "So we make the impossible possible and follow the entropy footprints of the magnetic moments and thus gain new insights into a supposed quantum spin fluid," continues Pustogow. Prof. Andrej Pustogow. Credit: Vienna University of Technology

The researchers also found that the phase diagram of -(BEDT-TTF)2Cu2(CN)3 strongly resembles that of helium-3. Already back in the 1950s a Soviet researcher predicted that helium-3 behaves differently from conventional materials, turning from solid to liquid rather than from liquid to solid at low temperatures (of less than 0.3 Kelvin). Exactly the same effect occurs with electrons in solids when they freeze upon increasing temperature from a metallic state (mobile electrons) to a Mott insulator, in which the electrons are firmly bound to the atom and do not move.

This "Pomeranchuk effect," named after the researcher who predicted it, was also observed by the international research team in -(BEDT-TTF)2Cu2(CN)3: At higher temperatures, the material initially shows insulating behavior with rigid electrons that melt into a liquid (metal) when it cools. Below 6 Kelvin, however, the electrons freeze again and lose their magnetic moments as well.

"Although -(BEDT-TTF)2Cu2(CN)3 itself is not a quantum spin liquid, our research provides important clues for further research into these materials. For example, our experiments help to better understand the mechanism of magnetoelastic coupling. If we succeed in controlling this effect, we may also be able to eventually realize a quantum spin liquid," Pustogow says.

More information: A. Pustogow et al, Chasing the spin gap through the phase diagram of a frustrated Mott insulator, Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-37491-z

Journal information: Nature Communications

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Mrs. Davis Episode 1: The Crucial Clue To The Stranded Man’s … – Looper

Erwin Schrdinger has been recognized as "the father of quantum mechanics," which deals with subatomic particles. At this level of scale, the normal laws of physics begin to break down, which is why quantum physics is now considered a separate school of thought from classical physics. Famously, Schrdinger once presented a thought experiment to illustrate a paradox inherent in the principle of quantum superposition, which provides that a system can exist in multiple states until its observation leads to the result: There is a cat inside a box, and the cat is both alive and dead until the box is opened, which is an interesting concept to make an allusion to on "Mrs. Davis."

It is hard to deny the similarities between Arthur Schroedinger on "Mrs. Davis" and the Nobel Prize-winning physicist. Besides the cat, Arthur claims to be a scientist himself, and both of them wear glasses. While Arthur is possibly a descendant of Schrdinger, who died in the 1960s, the zaniness of "Mrs. Davis" allows for the possibility that he may be Schrdinger himself in a different state. Either way, it will be interesting to see where the character fits into the equation and why he was missing for ten years.

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A Student Graduates, a Professor Retires, but They Will Stay in Touch – Columbia University

Taylor says that the course and Harnishs senior thesis, a play she wrote about the course material, This is Your Computer on Drugswhich she is also directing on April 29 and 30 at Columbiarepresent the culmination of their three-year collaborative relationship.

Harnish took her first class with Taylor, Philosophy of Religion, during the spring semester of her freshman year, after which she decided to become a religion major instead of the double major she had declared in philosophy and theater. This was also when COVID hit, right when Harnish was writing her midterm paper, so the course was completed over Zoom. She then enrolled in two more courses with Taylor during the fall 2020 semester, Theory and Recovering Place, because he had hinted at retirement. Both classes were conducted virtually.

It was the depths of the pandemic, and Harnish, who had returned to Indiana, where she grew up, was having a hard time. She was living alone in a government-subsidized apartment for artists in Indianapolis, working two jobs, taking 16 course credit hours, and trying to cope with life during COVID.

Come midterms, she emailed Taylor to alert him that she was planning on withdrawing from Columbia for the rest of the semester because of her difficulty managing everything. He offered to Zoom with her later that day.

He talked me into staying in school, said Harnish, and its a good thing he did, because my final project for Recovering Place was my first full-length play, The Foundation of Roses.

The 60-page script is a ghost story about her challenging childhood experiences, said Taylor. It was so remarkable that I nominated it for the Religion Departments Peter Awn Award, which is given annually to the most outstanding undergraduate paper or project in the department. My colleagues agreed with my assessment, and Alethea won the award in 2021.

Harnish has since written four more plays. One of them, Phantasmagoria, a one-person, autobiographical show, made its Off-Broadway debut in June 2022 when she performed it at the Downtown Urban Arts Festival, where it won second place for the Best Play Award. The work was about leaving her rural roots in Indiana to attend college in New York.

According to Harnish, she was the first person from her high school to get into an Ivy League university, and traveling halfway across the country to a big city was a culture shock. Meeting Taylor, who became a mentor, was very beneficial for her.

Over time, the relationship has morphed from a mentor-mentee one into something more reciprocal, said Harnish.

Taylor, who started teaching at Williams College in 1973, and arrived full-time at Columbia in 2007, said that early on he detected something very special about Alethea. It was not just her exceptional intelligence, interest, maturity, and determination, but also a rare imaginative creativity.

Once campus came back to life in fall 2021, at the start of Harnishs junior year, the two continued their conversations in person, and Harnish started sending Taylor examples of her writing. They met regularly during Taylors office hours to discuss her work. One day, she asked him what he was working on for his next book. Hegel and quantum mechanics, he said.

In one of those strange moments the theoretical physicist Wolfgang Pauli and the psychologist Carl Jung labeled synchronicity, said Taylor, Alethea said, Thats weird because I want to write and produce a play for my senior thesis about quantum physics and New Age spirituality.

Out of that convergence came the course theyre now co-teaching. They started by delving deeper into their shared interest in the material through reading and further discussion. Few people realize that personal computers, the Internet, the World Wide Web, and the Metaverse all trace their origins to hippies and the drug culture of the 1960s, said Taylor.

The more I thought about it, the clearer it became that this would be the perfect subject for my last course, he continued. My professional career spanned precisely the half-century from the 1960s to the present.

When Taylor asked her to co-teach the course, Harnish was initially terrified. We had spent almost two years in conversation by that point, and I knew that this would be the opportunity of a lifetime, she said. His insisting that he was also learning from me gave me the confidence to take on such a role.

Although Harnish has fully embraced her leadership role with the course this semester, she is not sure if she will pursue a career in higher education. Her immediate plans after graduation are to travel to Greece this summer with a Brooklyn-based theater company, providing administrative support for its apprentice program. She then wants to spend a year in New York, completing the applications for various playwriting fellowships and other writing programs.

Back in the classroom, the next time Hippie Physics meets, Harnish, dressed in a jean shirt, long, pleated skirt, and cowboy boots, leads the discussion on the assigned readings from The Book by Alan Watts and Zen Mind, Beginners Mind by Shunryu Suzuki. One of her touches has been to start every session spending a few moments listening to one of the eras classic rock songs, and then opening the floor to a parsing of the songs meaning. Todays selection is Led Zeppelins Stairway to Heaven.

After she stops the music, she says, What is the implication philosophically of there being a stairway to heaven for us? Were down here, and we have to get up there.

As he watches her effortlessly command the classroom, Taylor says, Strangely, the success of this course makes it both easier and more difficult for me to stop teaching. We hear much, perhaps too much, today about the problems with higher education, and especially with the humanities. But as I watch Alethea teach and her fellow undergraduates respond to her, I have hope for the future.

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Emerging Artist Seffa Kleins Radiant New York Debut Is Inspired by Science, Stargazing, and the Work of Her Grandfather, Yves Klein – artnet News

Seffa Klein. Portrait by Sam Frost

Ever since the discovery of quantum mechanics during the last century, scientists have sought to unify the contradicting laws simultaneously governing the ever-uncertain atomic level and humanitys self-assured inertial frame as maintained by Isaac Newton. The latest series by Phoenix- and L.A.-based Seffa Klein (b. 1996) seeks a similar theory of everything to unite her work, on view in Kleins New York debut Webs: Where Everything Belongs at SFA Advisory through May 31.

Seated amongst the exhibitions eight abstract geometries, made of bismuth, plaster, and acrylic on woven glass in lieu of canvas, Klein said that ever since she started making conceptual art at 17 shes remained reticent about forcing the work to communicate her process. Instead, Klein said, while surrounded by these radiating textures that loom on, somehow, even larger than their actual size, that the process itself exemplifies her works mission: to uncover realitys lowest common denominators.

Installation view of Seffa Kleins WEB(Accelerating Light)(2023) and WEB (Walk Through Zero) (2023). Courtesy of SFA Advisory.

Webs interweaves the many mediums Klein has experimented with this past decade. Its the first time shes harmonized so many metals and materials within a full series, accompanied here by six smaller gouache paintings examining the fractal patterns throughout this show in detail. Webs also marks the first time Klein has woven so many ideas into a single series, pairing her sun gazing practice with the symbolic languages shes devised to centrifuge meaning itself.

Some threads begin before Kleins lifetime. Shes the granddaughter of French artist Yves Klein, a student of the sublime who released thousands of balloons upon Pariss streets to compliment his gallery shows and harnessed women as paintbrushes to sign the sky. Living artistically took its toll Yves Klein died of a heart attack in his 30s, long before meeting his granddaughter.

Two decades after Klein passed, his widow Rotraut Klein and her new husband Daniel Moquay moved from France to Phoenix most likely, Klein told me, because they wanted to live somewhere warm in America without the fear of earthquakes. Rich with otherworldly desert landscapes, wild west lore, and ancient Indigenous wisdom, there was a magical vibe back then and there, too. Moquay went on to manage the Yves Klein Archives and operate a French restaurant in Phoenix where Kleins to-be mother worked on staff and met her father, Yves Kleins biological son. By the time Klein herself was 10 their family had moved to Northern Arizona and started a farm that the fledgling artist helped out on.

Installation view Seffa Klein: Webs at SFA Advisory, 2023. Courtesy of the artist and SFA Advisory.

I grew up a couple different ways, she said. One of them is traveling around the world, going to all sorts of fancy openings. The other is on a farm, digging and pulling weeds, working hard with my hands in the sun. She never fantasized about becoming an artist because she already was one. Instead, Klein planned to be an inventor.

I was definitely born with this, Klein continued. Or it could be epigenetic. I feel there is spiritual genetics, too, that happens to align with a physical genetics at times. Much like her grandfather invented International Klein Blue, Kleins artwork centers on material too.

At 17, after years of drawing aliens and portraits, Klein turned her eye toward mathematical abstractions. She wrote equations for flowers and translated floral hues through them in binary code, decoupling integers from the values that we unquestioningly assign them. She calls these works Fibonacci abstractions. They feel very 17, Klein said, other than the ternary math.

17 deluxe, I observed. 40 rising, Klein quipped, referencing astrological birth charts.

Installation view Seffa Klein: Webs at SFA Advisory, 2023. Courtesy of the artist and SFA Advisory.

Klein went to UCLA to study astrophysics and art by the ocean. Favoring Will Rogers State Beach between Santa Monica and Malibu, Klein hit a record 180-day beach streak during the pandemic, continuing her 15-year sun gazing practice charging up energetically by staring at the sun during sunrise or sunset when the UV rays are scattered on the horizon, she clarified.

In college, Klein made amorphous forms of plaster layered thickly on a constructed armature that shed then carve into, uncovering the colors beneath. It was about creative destruction, she said, concealing things for myself to discover them. In paradoxes like these, where the mind must split itself to encompass opposing forces, Klein and others see a portal to truth.

Around her graduation in 2017, Klein discovered gallium metal, a nontoxic facsimile of lead that melts at the human body temperature. Its used in some medical scans. Through the molecular process of wetting, the same one once favored to make silver mirrors, she painted intricate metal patterns on glass. The process proved fragile and left Klein longing for color.

Seffa Klein, New Stream (2019). Courtesy of the artist.

Then she found bismuthbrilliant, safe to melt without a foundry, and hailing from collisions between neutron stars. All heavy metals are created in these high energy events, Klein noted. Theyre explosive, intense materials. Rarer than gold, Klein then concentrated bismuths full opalescent color spectrum across a series called Multiple Displacement Theorycompositions where flat shapes act as a language to convey how the earth, heaven, and humans interact.

Shes noticed that similar geometries persist in Webs, sculpted instead with impasto plaster outlines that interlock and weave so none take precedence on the visual hierarchyexcept, maybe, the glimmering solidified bismuth coating the top. Butterfly forms appear elsewhere to honor the Butterfly Effect, the principle of apparent randomness that prohibits humanity from predicting the weather past ten days at present, discovered by MIT physicist Ed Lorenz in 1963.

Installation view of Seffa Kleins WEB (Starchart)(2023). Installation view. Courtesy of SFA Advisory.

Or maybe its all just random to us ants on the rug. The gaze is my metaphor for your ability to structure your own consciousness via your attention, Klein said. These pieces are about the ability to see that all in the universe is ordered, that chaos is an illusion of our scale.

Rather than oxygenating the bismuth to provoke its hues, here Klein allows the material to act like a drawing. Acrylic paint, a new addition, provides color from each works base, inspired by seaside sunsets and pearlescent mollusks. Shifting forms and colors throughout evoke varying shades of the same transcendental state achieved by ordering the mind through the gazelearning to wield both like tools, and to wrap ones brain around concepts like quantum physics, which might not feel familiar but are always relevant, since truly everything is made of electrons.

Detail of Seffa Kleins WEB (Because 4,5,6)(2023). Detailed installation view, courtesy of SFA Advisory.

Some shades are as intense as Kleins own gazetake Web (Accelerating Light), compared with Web (Like a Sunflower). I think when youre accessing something profound, its always a bit scary, Klein said, echoing previous sentiments on the very meaning of awe-inspiring. Later, she added, Every time you go to the next state of consciousness, theres a death of the lower state of consciousness. Some works, maybe all if you need it, are an invitation to that death.

Klein is hardly daunted by her devotion to discovering reality itself. Everything in the universe better be knowable, she joked, otherwise, shes gonna kick the universes ass. Still, the process, the journey, is the point. Meaningfulness exists inherently everywhere, Klein said. Focusing ones attention on finding the nature of life is the meaning. It all starts with the gaze.

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Emerging Artist Seffa Kleins Radiant New York Debut Is Inspired by Science, Stargazing, and the Work of Her Grandfather, Yves Klein - artnet News

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Quantum liquid becomes solid when heated – Phys.org

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Solids can be melted by heating, but in the quantum world it can also be the other way around: In a joint effort, an experimental team led by Francesca Ferlaino in Innsbruck, Austria, and a theoretical team led by Thomas Pohl in Aarhus, Denmark, show how a quantum liquid forms supersolid structures through heating. The scientists obtained a first phase diagram for a supersolid at finite temperature.

Supersolids are a relatively new and exciting area of research. They exhibit both solid and superfluid properties simultaneously. In 2019, three research groups were able to demonstrate this state for the first time beyond doubt in ultracold quantum gases, among them the research group led by Francesca Ferlaino from the Department of Experimental Physics at the University of Innsbruck and the AW Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI) in Innsbruck.

In 2021, Francesca Ferlaino's team studied in detail the life cycle of supersolid states in a dipolar gas of dysprosium atoms. They observed something unexpected: "Our data suggested that an increase in temperature promotes the formation of supersolid structures," recounts Claudia Politi of Francesca Ferlaino's team. "This surprising behavior was an important boost to theory, which had previously paid little attention to thermal fluctuations in this context."

The Innsbruck scientists joined forces with the Danish theoretical group led by Thomas Pohl to explore the effect of thermal fluctuation. They developed and published in Nature Communications a theoretical model that can explain the experimental results and underlines the thesis that heating the quantum liquid can lead to the formation of a quantum crystal. The theoretical model shows that as the temperature rises, these structures can form more easily.

"With the new model, we now have a phase diagram for the first time that shows the formation of a supersolid state as a function of temperature," Francesca Ferlaino says. "The surprising behavior, which contradicts our everyday observation, arises from the anisotropic nature of the dipole-dipole interaction of the strongly magnetic atoms of dysprosium."

More information: J. Snchez-Baena et al, Heating a dipolar quantum fluid into a solid, Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-37207-3

Journal information: Nature Communications

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Research Provides New Insight Into the Quantum Nature of How … – AZoQuantum

Lithium-ion batteries power our lives.

Because they are lightweight, have high energy density and are rechargeable, the batteries power many products, from laptops and cell phones to electric cars and toothbrushes.

However, current lithium-ion batteries have reached the limit of how much energy they can store. That has researchers looking for more powerful and cheaper alternatives.

Sulfur is inexpensive, plentiful and, theoretically, has a lot more energy density than conventional lithium ion cell materials, said Clemson University researcher Ramakrishna Podila, an associate professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy.

Today's electric vehicles can drive about 300 miles per charge. Lithium-sulfur batteries have the potential for a driving range of more than 400 miles with practical capacities of up to 500 watt-hours per kilogram at the pack level, twice that of lithium-ion batteries.

That has made it a prime target for researchers.

But there are challenges, the most significant being that elemental sulfur's octagonal form undergoes a series of structural and morphological changes during the battery's charge-discharge cycle, making it unstable and leading to fast cell failure. On the other hand, sulfurized polymer cathodes are stable at low sulfur content because they have shorter sulfur chains.

"The total energy you get depends not just on the total charge but also on the spatial and temporal distribution of the charges. The more localized they are, the less energy you get. We showed that the total energy can be increased when certain quantum restrictions on the shape of charge distribution are lifted," Podila said.

The researchers found that adding nitrogen to the sulfurous polymer spreads the charges out and increases the quantum capacitance.

"We've shown that you have a high capacity with elemental sulfur, but you cannot make a good, practical battery. You don't have as much sulfur in a sulfurized polymer, but it works so well by distributing charge better in the presence of nitrogen," Podila said. "So, practically speaking, we can make cells using sulfurized polymer with high quantum capacitance that match practical performance metrics of elemental sulfur battery that are limited by polysulfides."

Podila continued, "This research provides new insight into the actual quantum nature of how batteries or capacitors work. We often describe current flow in batteries and capacitors by treating electrons as rigid balls. In reality, electrons behave very differently at a microscopic level requiring special statistical treatment to describe their distribution in a crystal. Our experiments revealed some interesting quantum effects that manifest in the presence of nitrogen atoms. Beyond applications in li-ion batteries, our work on quantum capacitance is going to hopefully help people develop better batteries in the future by putting first things first rather than following an Edisonian approach."

The findings were published in the journal Advanced Science. The article is titled "Insights into the Pseudocapacitive Behavior of Sulfurized Polymer Electrodes for Li-S Batteries." In addition to Podila, the authors are current or former Clemson graduate students Nawraj Sapkota, Shailendra Chiluwal, Prakash Parajuli and Alan Rowland.

This work was financially supported by the NASA Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) Award No. NNH17ZHA002C, South Carolina Stimulus Research Program (SRP) Award No. 18-SR03, South Carolina (SC) EPSCoR Made in SC Gear program (19-GE-01) and funding through the Clemson Department of Physics and Astronomy.

Source:http://www.clemson.edu/

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Extremely Surprising Nuclear Physicists Have a Groundbreaking … – SciTechDaily

Jefferson Labs CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer in Experimental Hall B. Credit: DOEs Jefferson Lab

Nuclear physicists have made a groundbreaking discovery through their unique analysis of experimental data. For the first time ever, they have observed the production of lambda particles, also known as strange matter, through a process called semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering (SIDIS). The data obtained also suggests that the building blocks of protons, quarks, and gluons can sometimes march through the nucleus of an atom in pairs referred to as diquarks. The experiment was carried out at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, which is run by the U.S. Department of Energy.

This achievement has been the culmination of many years of hard work. The data that was used in this study was originally gathered in 2004. Lamiaa El Fassi, who is currently serving as an associate professor of physics at Mississippi State University and is the lead researcher of this project, initially analyzed these data while she was working on her thesis project to obtain her graduate degree on a different topic.

Nearly a decade after completing her initial research with these data, El Fassi revisited the dataset and led her group through a careful analysis to yield these unprecedented measurements. The dataset comes from experiments in Jefferson Labs Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF), a DOE user facility. In the experiment, nuclear physicists tracked what happened when electrons from CEBAF scatter off the target nucleus and probe the confined quarks inside protons and neutrons. The results were recently published in Physical Review Letters.

These studies help build a story, analogous to a motion picture, of how the struck quark turns into hadrons. In a new paper, we report first-ever observations of such a study for the lambda baryon in the forward and backward fragmentation regions, El Fassi said.

Like the more familiar protons and neutrons, each lambda is made up of three quarks.

Unlike protons and neutrons, which only contain a mixture of up and down quarks, lambdas contain one up quark, one down quark, and one strange quark. Physicists have dubbed matter that contains strange quarks strange matter.

In this work, El Fassi and her colleagues studied how these particles of strange matter form from collisions of ordinary matter. To do so, they shot CEBAFs electron beam at different targets, including carbon, iron, and lead. When a high-energy electron from CEBAF reaches one of these targets, it breaks apart a proton or neutron inside one of the targets nuclei.

Because the proton or neutron is totally broken apart, there is little doubt that the electron interacts with the quark inside, El Fassi said.

After the electron interacts with a quark or quarks via an exchanged virtual photon, the struck quark(s) begins moving as a free particle in the medium, typically joining up with other quark(s) it encounters to form a new composite particle as they propagate through the nucleus. And some of the time, this composite particle will be a lambda.

But the lambda is short-lived after formation, it will swiftly decay into two other particles: a pion and either a proton or neutron. To measure the different properties of these briefly created lambda particles, physicists must detect its two daughter particles, as well as the beam electron that scattered off the target nucleus.

The experiment that collected this data, EG2, used the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) detector in Jefferson Labs Experimental Hall B. These recently published results, First Measurement of Electroproduction off Nuclei in the Current and Target Fragmentation Regions, are part of the CLAS collaboration, which involves almost 200 physicists worldwide.

This work is the first to measure the lambda using this process, which is known as semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering, in the forward and backward fragmentation regions. Its more difficult to use this method to study lambda particles, because the particle decays so quickly, it cant be measured directly.

This class of measurement has only been performed on protons before, and on lighter, more stable particles, said coauthor William Brooks, professor of physics at Federico Santa Mara Technical University and co-spokesperson of the EG2 experiment.

The analysis was so challenging, it took several years for El Fassi and her group to re-analyze the data and extract these results. It was her thesis advisor, Kawtar Hafidi, who encouraged her to pursue the investigation of the lambda from these datasets.

I would like to commend Lamiaas hard work and perseverance in dedicating years of her career working on this, said Hafidi, associate laboratory director for physical sciences and engineering at Argonne National Lab and co-spokesperson of the EG2 experiment. Without her, this work would not have seen fruition.

It hasnt been easy, El Fassi said. Its a long and time-consuming process, but it was worth the effort. When you spend so many years working on something, it feels good to see it published.

El Fassi began this lambda analysis when she herself was a postdoc, a couple of years prior to becoming an assistant professor at Mississippi State University. Along the way, several of her own postdocs at Mississippi State have helped extract these results, including coauthor Taya Chetry.

Im very happy and motivated to see this work being published, said Chetry, who is now a postdoctoral researcher at Florida International University.

A notable finding from this intensive analysis changes the way physicists understand how lambdas form in the wake of particle collisions.

In similar studies that have used semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering to study other particles, the particles of interest usually form after a single quark was struck by the virtual photon exchanged between the electron beam and the target nucleus. But the signal left by lambda in the CLAS detector suggests a more packaged deal.

The authors analysis showed that when forming a lambda, the virtual photon has been absorbed part of the time by a pair of quarks, known as a diquark, instead of just one. After being struck, this diquark went on to find a strange quark and forms a lambda.

This quark pairing suggests a different mechanism of production and interaction than the case of the single quark interaction, Hafidi said.

A better understanding of how different particles form helps physicists in their effort to decipher the strong interaction, the fundamental force that holds these quark-containing particles together. The dynamics of this interaction are very complicated, and so is the theory used to describe it: quantum chromodynamics (QCD).

Comparing measurements to models of QCDs predictions allows physicists to test this theory. Because the diquark finding differs from the models current predictions, it suggests something about the model is off.

There is an unknown ingredient that we dont understand. This is extremely surprising since the existing theory can describe essentially all other observations, but not this one, Brooks said. That means there is something new to learn, and at the moment, we have no clue what it could be.

To find out, theyll need even more measurements.

Data for EG2 were collected with 5.014 GeV (billion electron-volt) electron beams in the CEBAFs 6 GeV era. Future experiments will use electron beams from the updated CEBAF, which now extend up to 11 GeV for Experimental Hall B, as well as an updated CLAS detector known as CLAS12, to continue studying the formation of a variety of particles, including lambdas, with higher-energy electrons.

The upcoming Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) at DOEs Brookhaven National Laboratory will also provide a new opportunity to continue studying this strange matter and quark pairing structure of the nucleon with greater precision.

These results lay the groundwork for upcoming studies at the upcoming CLAS12 and the planned EIC experiments, where one can investigate the diquark scattering in greater detail, Chetry said.

El Fassi is also a co-spokesperson for CLAS12 measurements of quark propagation and hadron formation. When data from the new experiments is finally ready, physicists will compare it to QCD predictions to further refine this theory.

Any new measurement that will give novel information toward understanding the dynamics of strong interactions is very important, she said.

Reference: First Measurement of Electroproduction off Nuclei in the Current and Target Fragmentation Regions by T. Chetry et al. (CLAS Collaboration), 4 April 2023, Physical Review Letters.DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.142301

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