http://www.physorg.com/news167925273.html

Transparent aluminium is 'new state of matter'

July 27th, 2009


(PhysOrg.com) -- Oxford scientists have created a transparent form of
aluminium by bombarding the metal with the world’s most powerful soft
X-ray laser. 'Transparent aluminium' previously only existed in science
fiction, featuring in the movie Star Trek IV, but the real material is an
exotic new state of matter with implications for planetary science and
nuclear fusion.


In this week’s Nature Physics an international team, led by Oxford
University scientists, report that a short pulse from the FLASH laser
‘knocked out’ a core electron from every aluminium atom in a sample
without disrupting the metal’s crystalline structure. This turned the
aluminium nearly invisible to extreme ultraviolet radiation.

''What we have created is a completely new state of matter nobody has seen
before,’ said Professor Justin Wark of Oxford University’s Department of
Physics, one of the authors of the paper. ‘Transparent aluminium is just
the start. The physical properties of the matter we are creating are
relevant to the conditions inside large planets, and we also hope that by
studying it we can gain a greater understanding of what is going on during
the creation of 'miniature stars' created by high-power laser implosions,
which may one day allow the power of nuclear fusion to be harnessed here
on Earth.’

The discovery was made possible with the development of a new source of
radiation that is ten billion times brighter than any synchrotron in the
world (such as the UK’s Diamond Light Source). The FLASH laser, based in
Hamburg, Germany, produces extremely brief pulses of soft X-ray light,
each of which is more powerful than the output of a power plant that
provides electricity to a whole city.

The Oxford team, along with their international colleagues, focused all
this power down into a spot with a diameter less than a twentieth of the
width of a human hair. At such high intensities the aluminium turned
transparent.

Whilst the invisible effect lasted for only an extremely brief period - an
estimated 40 femtoseconds - it demonstrates that such an exotic state of
matter can be created using very high power X-ray sources.

Professor Wark added: ‘What is particularly remarkable about our
experiment is that we have turned ordinary aluminium into this exotic new
material in a single step by using this very powerful laser. For a brief
period the sample looks and behaves in every way like a new form of
matter. In certain respects, the way it reacts is as though we had changed
every aluminium atom into silicon: it’s almost as surprising as finding
that you can turn lead into gold with light!’

The researchers believe that the new approach is an ideal way to create
and study such exotic states of matter and will lead to further work
relevant to areas as diverse as planetary science, astrophysics and
nuclear fusion power.

A report of the research, 'Turning solid aluminium transparent by intense
soft X-ray photoionization', is published in Nature Physics. The research
was carried out by an international team led by Oxford University
scientists Professor Justin Wark, Dr Bob Nagler, Dr Gianluca Gregori,
William Murphy, Sam Vinko and Thomas Whitcher.

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