If this has appeared earlier, I missed it...Mark

18 April 2012 
Electron 'split-personality' seen in new quasi-particle
Researchers have discovered another way that electrons - one of the Universe's 
few fundamental particles - can undergo an "identity crisis".
Electrons can divide into "quasi-particles", in which their fundamental 
properties can split up and move around like independent particles.
Two such quasi-particles had been seen before, but a team reporting in Nature 
has now confirmed a third: the orbiton.
These orbitons carry the energy of an electron's orbit around a nucleus.
Generally, these properties are not independent - a given electron has that set 
of properties, maintaining them as it moves around, while a nearby electron has 
a different set. 
But the idea of quasi-particles allow these properties to split and move around 
independently, granting them to nearby electrons.
An analogy of this slippery idea is a traffic jam on a one-lane road - it is as 
if one blue car, pointed west and running at 1,000 RPM, passes on its blueness, 
its engine speed and its direction to adjacent cars.
The cases in which such strange behaviour can be induced are rare, but an 
international team of researchers turned to a material called strontium cuprate 
to investigate it.
The arrangement of atoms in the material is much like the one-lane road: 
electrons can only move in one direction along it in what is called a spin 
chain.
The team used the Swiss Light Source at the Paul Scherrer Institut in 
Switzerland to shine intense X-ray beams into the material, catching the light 
that came out with precision detectors.
Analysis of how the X-ray beam was altered in the process gave evidence of how 
electrons were given an energy boost, and where it went. 
Thorsten Schmitt of the Swiss Light Source explained that the team made an 
unexpected find.
They saw that some of the X-ray energy went into raising an electron to a 
different orbit around a nucleus, and that this "orbital excitation" could move 
along the chain, bumping an adjacent electron up an orbit, and then the next 
electron along, and so on.
"We wanted to understand the spinon excitations - we were sure we would see 
spinons - the surprise was also to get these orbital excitations behaving in a 
collective way," he told BBC News.
It is a find destined for fundamental physics textbooks, but Dr Schmitt says 
that the curious behaviour may help scientists understand equally curious 
effects in similar materials.
"It's all basic research but we hope this is very relevant for understanding 
superconductivity in cuprates, which are made out of the same building blocks."

Mark Goldes
Co-founder, Chava Energy
CEO, Aesop Institute
301A North Main Street
Sebastopol, CA 95472

www.chavaenergy.com
www.aesopinstitute.org

707 861-9070
707 497-3551 fax
 Science & Environment 

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