SD: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

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SD: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

Post by bystander » Mon Feb 15, 2010 5:28 pm

'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup
Science Daily - 2010 Feb 15
Scientists at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a 2.4-mile-circumference particle accelerator at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, report the first hints of profound symmetry transformations in the hot soup of quarks, antiquarks, and gluons produced in RHIC's most energetic collisions. In particular, the new results, reported in the journal Physical Review Letters, suggest that "bubbles" formed within this hot soup may internally disobey the so-called "mirror symmetry" that normally characterizes the interactions of quarks and gluons.
'Perfect' Liquid Hot Enough to Be Quark Soup

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ScienceNews: Hot and heavy matter 4 trillion degree fever

Post by bystander » Mon Feb 15, 2010 7:39 pm

Hot and heavy matter runs a 4 trillion degree fever
Science News - 2010 Feb 15
Talk about hot and heavy. Scientists have taken the temperature of a minuscule glob of dense, hot matter formed in the grisly aftermath of collisions between gold atoms traveling near the speed of light. The material reaches an estimated 4 trillion degrees Celsius, about 250,000 times hotter than the sun’s interior, and higher than any temperature ever reached in a laboratory, researchers reported February 15 at a meeting of the American Physical Society.

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PhysicsToday: RHIC finds hints to why we exist

Post by bystander » Tue Feb 16, 2010 11:22 pm

RHIC finds hints to why we exist
By Physics Today on February 16, 2010 6:15 PM
Physicists at Brookhaven National Laboratory's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), have discovered some experimental hints of why there is matter in the universe by replicating the conditions of the first microseconds after the Big Bang.

When the Big Bang occurred, according to the symmetry rules that govern the universe, equal parts of matter and antimatter should have been created leading to all matter being annihilated. But this was not the case:
Click to play embedded YouTube video.

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Re: ScienceDaily: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

Post by The Code » Wed Feb 17, 2010 12:03 am

Quality Links ByStander (Thanks Dude <<-- :lol: )

That Liquid Energy, Back in the news.
PhysicsToday wrote:Predictions made prior to RHIC’s initial operations in 2000 expected that the quark-gluon plasma would exist as a gas. But RHIC’s first three years of operation showed that the matter produced at RHIC behaves as a liquid, whose constituent particles interact very strongly among themselves. This liquid matter has been described as nearly “perfect” in the sense that it flows with almost no frictional resistance, or viscosity. Such a “perfect” liquid doesn’t fit with the picture of “free” quarks and gluons physicists had previously used to describe the quark-gluon plasma.
Here,s another Quote:
Chris Peterson wrote:What is "liquid energy"? I've never heard of such at thing; AFAIK there is no such concept in modern physics.


http://asterisk.apod.com/vie ... gy#p108486

Please take what I just wrote, In good spirits. :wink:

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Re: ScienceDaily: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

Post by bystander » Wed Feb 17, 2010 12:30 am

As in your quote of a previous topic, the quote at Physics Today refers to liquid matter not liquid energy. Energy does not have a liquid state.

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Re: ScienceDaily: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

Post by The Code » Wed Feb 17, 2010 1:02 am

Does not, every stage have its mirror image? E = mc^2



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Re: ScienceDaily: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

Post by bystander » Wed Feb 17, 2010 1:15 am

Energy is just energy, it does not have states, per se, there only states of matter. While Einstein's equation establishes a relationship between energy and matter, they are not equivalent.

Image
Nomenclacture for the phase changes of a system.

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Re: ScienceDaily: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

Post by The Code » Wed Feb 17, 2010 1:32 am

So explain the matter, you do not understand. :lol:

I am trying to.

I could use some help :cry:

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Yale: Physicists May Have Broken a Law of Nature

Post by bystander » Fri Mar 19, 2010 2:42 pm

For One Tiny Instant, Physicists May Have Broken a Law of Nature
Yale University Science & Engineering - 2010 March 19
For a brief instant, it appears, scientists at Brook­haven National Laboratory on Long Island recently discovered a law of nature had been broken.

Action still resulted in an equal and opposite reaction, gravity kept the Earth circling the Sun, and conservation of energy remained intact. But for the tiniest fraction of a second at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), physicists created a symmetry-breaking bubble of space where parity no longer existed.

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TAM: Researchers Help To Create New Form Of Matter

Post by bystander » Fri Mar 19, 2010 2:54 pm

Researchers Help To Create New Form Of Matter
Texas A&M - 2010 March 04
A worldwide team of researchers, including 10 from Texas A&M University, have for the first time created a particle that is believed to have been in existence immediately after the creation of the universe – the so-called “Big Bang” – and it could lead to new questions and answers about some of the basic laws of physics because in essence, it creates a new form of matter.

Researchers Carl Gagliardi, Saskia Mioduszewski, Robert Tribble, Matthew Cervantes, Rory Clarke, Martin Codrington, Pibero Djawotho, James Drachenberg, Ahmed Hamed and Liaoyuan Huo, all affiliated with the Texas A&M Cyclotron Institute, along with numerous researchers from universities and labs all over the world, have created the anti-hypertriton – a never-before-seen particle – by colliding gold nuclei at extremely high speeds.

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Physicists May Have Broken a Law of Nature

Post by The Code » Sun Mar 21, 2010 5:34 pm

''Action still resulted in an equal and opposite reaction, gravity kept the Earth circling the Sun, and conservation of energy remained intact. But for the tiniest fraction of a second at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), physicists created a symmetry-breaking bubble of space where parity no longer existed''.


http://www.physorg.com/news188211977.html

Interesting.

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Re: Physicists May Have Broken a Law of Nature

Post by Chris Peterson » Sun Mar 21, 2010 6:00 pm

mark swain wrote:''Action still resulted in an equal and opposite reaction, gravity kept the Earth circling the Sun, and conservation of energy remained intact. But for the tiniest fraction of a second at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), physicists created a symmetry-breaking bubble of space where parity no longer existed''.

http://www.physorg.com/news188211977.html

Interesting.
It is interesting. But it's a bad title. You can't break a law of nature. If these guys did what they claim, and the interpretation is correct, it simply means the book of nature's laws got a little thicker, or a little more complex.
Chris

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Re: SD: 'Bubbles' of Broken Symmetry in Quark Soup

Post by bystander » Thu Jun 10, 2010 2:55 am

Explained: Quark gluon plasma
Massachusetts Institute of Technology - 09 June 2010
By colliding particles, physicists hope to recreate the earliest moments of our universe, on a much smaller scale.

For a few millionths of a second after the Big Bang, the universe consisted of a hot soup of elementary particles called quarks and gluons. A few microseconds later, those particles began cooling to form protons and neutrons, the building blocks of matter.

Over the past decade, physicists around the world have been trying to re-create that soup, known as quark-gluon plasma (QGP), by slamming together nuclei of atoms with enough energy to produce trillion-degree temperatures.

“If you’re interested in the properties of the microseconds-old universe, the best way to study it is not by building a telescope, it’s by building an accelerator,” says Krishna Rajagopal, an MIT theoretical physicist who studies QGP.

Quarks and gluons, though they make up protons and neutrons, behave very differently from those heavier particles. Their interactions are governed by a theory known as quantum chromodynamics, developed in part by MIT professors Jerome Friedman and Frank Wilczek, who both won Nobel prizes for their work. However, the actual behavior of quarks and gluons is difficult to study because they are confined within heavier particles. The only place in the universe where QGP exists is inside high-speed accelerators, for the briefest flashes of time.

In 2005, scientists at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory reported creating QGP by smashing gold atoms together at nearly the speed of light. These collisions can produce temperatures up to 4 trillion degrees — 250,000 times warmer than the sun’s interior and hot enough to melt protons and neutrons into quarks and gluons.

The resulting super-hot, super-dense blob of matter, about a trillionth of a centimeter across, could give scientists new insights into the properties of the very early universe. So far, they have already made the surprising discovery that QGP is a nearly frictionless liquid, not the gas that physicists had expected.

By doing higher-energy collisions, scientists now hope to find out more about the properties of quark gluon plasma and whether it becomes gas-like at higher temperatures. They also want to delve further into the very surprising similarities that have been seen between QGP and ultracold gases (near absolute zero) that MIT’s Martin Zwierlein and others have created in the laboratory. Both substances are nearly frictionless, and theoretical physicists suspect that string theory may explain both phenomena, says Rajagopal.

At the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva, MIT faculty Gunther Roland, Wit Busza and Boleslaw Wyslouch are among the physicists planning to double the temperature achieved at Brookhaven, offering a glimpse of an even-earlier stage of the universe’s formation.

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