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Strings Link the Ultracold with the Superhot
Perfect liquids suggest theory’s math mirrors something real
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NEARLY "PERFECT LIQUID"View Larger Version | Researchers colliding gold particles at Brookhaven National Laboratory found stronger interactions among quarks and gluons (force lines shown in the simulation at right) than had been expected (left). The matter is now being described as a nearly "perfect liquid." Brookhaven National Laboratory

Shadows live in a simple world. They glide effortlessly across any sort of surface, oblivious to the higher dimension of space in which 3-D bodies move, collide and sometimes block the paths of rays of light.

Shadows have no idea how important that third dimension is, and how objects in it endow those very shadows with their quasi-physical existence. Indeed, the laws of shadow physics all depend on the third dimension’s presence. And just as the clueless inhabitants of the shadow world require an extra dimension to explain how they exist and interact, reality for humans may also depend on an invisible dimension or dimensions unknown.

Physicists, in fact, have long pondered possible higher dimensions beyond the familiar four — three of space and one of time — that describe ordinary experience. Such extra dimensions have emerged as essential features in a sophisticated mathematical pastime known as superstring theory. Believed by some theorists to be the ultimate building blocks of all physical reality, superstrings are supposedly inaccessible to experimental study. If they exist, they would be far too small to detect directly —enlarging a superstring to the size of an amoeba would be the equivalent of making an ant as big as the visible universe. Similarly, the extra dimensions that strings require would probably be far too small to detect by available methods.

So string theory has long remained in the physics version of The Twilight Zone, disconnected from the ordinary world of sight and sound. But now the extra-dimensional math has begun to audition for Reality TV. For the first time, superstring theorists can point to a place where their formulas help other physicists understand something they can see in their experiments.

One such experiment generates matter in its most fiery form —simulating the temperatures of the Big Bang itself. Another probes matter most frigid — atoms vastly colder than even the depths of outer space. At both extremes, matter behaves surprisingly like a liquid, contrary to all expectations. More surprising still, explaining this behavior apparently requires an extra dimension of space, something that superstring theory conveniently provides. And so the scientists who study hot matter, cold matter and string matter have found themselves sharing common ground in an extra-dimensional world.

“It surprised the heck out of us two years ago when we started realizing that this was the case,” says physicist Peter Steinberg of Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, N.Y. “It’s a once-in-a-generation convergence of scientific communities. None of us really saw this coming.”

Cosmic soup

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GAS BEHAVING AS A NEARLY "PERFECT LIQUID"View Larger Version | A strongly interacting ultracold gas by Duke University researchers expands and contracts at its sides but not its tips (as shown by the series of snapshots). The atoms exhibit collective behavior, so the gas behaves like a nearly "perfect liquid." A. Turlapov et al, Springer SEM

Steinberg and other scientists discussed the new developments recently in Chicago at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Speakers at a session there described the surprising confluence of different physics fields as a sort of perfect storm, with the eye centered on the esoteric idea of a “perfect liquid.”

Liquids are usually the Goldilocks state of matter, the not-too-hot, not-too-cold, cohesive yet shapeless assemblages of molecules that exist only in a relatively narrow range of temperatures. Colder, and matter typically becomes solid — rigid and crystalline. Hotter, and matter turns gaseous, with molecules flying about freely and occasionally colliding. Hotter still, and a gas should become plasma, with electrons torn from atoms to form an electromagnetic mélange of charged particles, a gas with flash.

When the universe was very young, and still superhot from the aftermath of the Big Bang, plasma should have been the only state of matter around. And that’s what scientists at Brookhaven expected to see when they smashed gold ions together at 99.99 percent of the speed of light using a machine called RHIC (for Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider). RHIC physicists thought the ion collisions would melt the gold’s protons and neutrons into a hot plasma of quarks and gluons at a temperature of a trillion kelvins, replicating conditions similar to those a microsecond after the birth of the universe. But instead of a gaslike plasma, the physicists reported in 2005, RHIC served up a hot quark soup, behaving more like a liquid than a plasma or gas.

“It’s given us a certain amount of consternation about what to call this stuff,” says Barbara Jacak of the RHIC team. “It certainly shows liquidlike properties.”

An ordinary plasma’s electrically charged particles should block the path of light, for example, just as a thick fog dampens the beams of a car’s headlights. But light passes right through RHIC’s quark-gluon soup, says Jacak. And free-flying quarks would easily be able to zip through the rarefied molecules of a gas, like a bowling ball scattering any pins in its way. But even the heaviest quarks get stuck in the soup.

“That is really astounding,” Jacak says. “It’s as if these bowling pins stopped the big giant bowling ball, and the only way they could do that is if they are somehow tied together with strings.”

Soon after the RHIC experiments, string theorists realized that their strings might be tying the bowling pins together, explaining the odd liquidlike behavior of the quark-gluon plasma. That was a spectacular realization in itself. But around the same time, another branch of physics found itself dipping into a perfect liquid, this time made from cold lithium atoms.

Very cool

In 2002, physicists at Duke University first created what they called a stable, strongly interacting gas of cold atoms, using the isotope lithium-6. Using laser beams to confine and cool the lithium atoms, researchers produced an atomic cloud with a temperature lower than a tenth of a millionth kelvins — barely above absolute zero.

Curiously, when researchers released the cigar-shaped cloud from its laser prison, it expanded at its sides, but not at the tips. Such an odd “elliptical flow” also described the expanding cloud of quarks and gluons produced at RHIC.

“It’s quite remarkable that we have such different systems, yet we have this common behavior,” says Duke’s John E. Thomas, who also spoke at the Chicago meeting.

Such similar flow seemed especially surprising given the wide disparity of the two systems, with a temperature difference of 19 orders of magnitude separating them. In both cases, the flow seemed to signal the features of a liquid — and a liquid with extremely low resistance to flow. Both cases constituted what physicists call a “strongly coupled” system, in which the particles exhibit collective behavior.

Strongly coupled systems are like a baseball stadium with a big crowd, where the fans can perform the wave, rather than a poorly attended game with the crowd so “weakly coupled” that nobody else notices if one fan stands up. In strongly coupled systems, string theory–based calculations suggest, there is a limit to how low the resistance to flow, or viscosity, can go. A liquid with that lowest possible viscosity earns the label “perfect,” and both the hot RHIC soup and the cold lithium cloud turn out to be nearly as close to perfect as possible.

This formula for perfection is actually a ratio of viscosity to entropy — a measure of disorder that depends on the system’s temperature. For a perfect liquid, the viscosity-entropy ratio is a very small number (about 0.08 in units derived from certain fundamental constants). For ordinary water, the ratio is 380 times higher than that theoretical minimum; liquid helium’s ratio is only 0.7, still about nine times higher than perfection. But both RHIC’s soup and the lithium atoms approach the theoretical limit  even more closely. Cold lithium’s ratio is less than 0.5, and the quark-gluon soup is in the neighborhood of 0.2.

Not only does string theory predict the perfect liquid limit for the viscosity-entropy ratio, string math also offers an explanation for how the cold and hot worlds can be so similar. Both systems can be described as something like a shadow world sitting in a higher dimension. Strongly coupled particles are linked by ripples traveling through the extra dimension, says Steinberg, of Brookhaven.

String math describing such ripples stems from an idea called the holographic principle, used by string theorists to describe certain kinds of black holes. A black hole’s entropy depends on its surface area — as though all the information in its three-dimensional interior is stored on its two-dimensional surface. (The “holographic” label is an allusion to ordinary holograms, where 3-D images are coated on a 2-D surface, like an emblem on a credit card.) The holographic principle has value because in some cases the math for a complex 3-D system (neglecting time) can be too hard to solve, but the equivalent 4-D math provides simpler equations to describe the same phenomena.

“The point is that we have two different kinds of systems capturing the same kind of physics,” says string theorist Clifford Johnson of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. “String theory provides us with a dictionary that translates between these two systems.”

One of the two systems is a realm of four spatial dimensions where the string math describes gravity and quantum theory; the other is the 3-D world of quarks and gluons. Usually the math for describing each of these systems looks very different. But string theory’s extra dimension allows the math to be transformed in ways that show the two systems to actually be equivalent — in technical terms, the systems are “dual” to each other.

“The bottom line is we can exploit all this, because we can use … easy computations in the gravity system to compute hard-to-compute things in the dual system,” Johnson said at the Chicago meeting.

So just as shadow physics is hard to explain without knowing about objects in the third dimension, quark physics makes more sense using the 4-D math. Quarks can be viewed, for instance, as the endpoints of strings that vibrate in an extra dimension, and that explains how they can be so strongly coupled. Precisely the same math can then also describe the collective behavior of the cold lithium atoms. As Johnson points out, viscosity is all about how neighboring pieces of a fluid communicate with each other. With an extra dimension, that communication can take place as disturbances in the higher dimensional space, explaining the perfect liquid behavior.

Strings strike back

In recent years it has become popular to criticize string theory as out of touch with reality. Popular books have been written by scientists, some prominent and others not so prominent, arguing that string theory makes no predictions that experiment can test, that its fundamental objects can’t be observed, that physicists have wasted their time on an enterprise that isn’t even scientific to begin with.

Such arguments leave an impression of utter unfamiliarity with the history of science. In times past, the same kinds of aspersions were cast against quarks, neutrinos, even the very existence of atoms. Superstrings are in good company. And string theory’s limit on how low viscosity can go now seems to have established that string math does indeed mirror something real in nature. “This may well be the first prediction from string theory to be validated by experiment,” Steinberg writes in a recent paper (arxiv.org/abs/0903.1474).

Superstrings’ success with perfect liquids does not, of course, establish that the whole theory is the correct description of the universe. Much work remains to figure out how much of reality string theory actually captures beyond the realm of perfect liquids. But the usefulness of superstring math in these instances argues strongly that those equations capture something true. Establishing that truth for certain will still not be easy.

It’s not surprising, of course, that such groundbreaking science should be difficult and controversial. Advances in physics today are naturally much tougher to achieve than they used to be —because the problems remaining to be solved are precisely those that have resisted solution for so long.

“A new truth always has to contend with many difficulties,” the German physicist Max Planck said decades ago. “If it were not so, it would have been discovered much sooner.”


Comments 23
  • This seems to be big news in favor of Superstring theory. If, as the article notes, a critique of string theory is that it makes no predictions that can be experimentally tested for, then these ultrahot/ultracold results appear to indeed be experimental results that support the predictions of string theory. Being that the only explanation of the properties of these perect liquids requires at least one extra dimension per the holographic principle as mentioned in the article, then this would seem to be big news! I'll be extremely interested in follow-up research and how this plays out in other science news outlets and media releases.

    Fascinating article!
    BlueFire BlueFire
    Apr. 15, 2009 at 4:37am
  • This is great research. Now they just need to see Quantum Entanglement as evidence of extra spatial dimensions. I can't believe they haven't already had the thought that two entangled particles are just two 3D representations of a single 4D phenomenon. The sooner science accepts the fact that our universe exists in higher dimensions, the sooner we can start making some real progress in the areas of Quantum and Astrophysics.
    Fleawest Fleawest
    Apr. 15, 2009 at 1:20pm
  • This is a nice achievment, indeed.

    The only question is, whether forty years of string theory development and high level math are really necessary for the understanding, inside of extremelly hot and dense droplets the particles would behave like boson condensate. When these particles are compressed, their repulsive forces will compensate mutually, which effectivelly leads into free motion of particles inside of droplet, i.e. into superfluous boson condensate state. And this is a quite common behavior, which is used for example for high pressure shaping of metals or in cummulative warheads, like bazooka - and nothing very surprising is about it - it's basically classical Newtonian mechanics.

    Sometimes I can feel a snake oil behind such theories.
    Zephir Zephir
    Apr. 16, 2009 at 11:01am
  • Gravity Limits Link Ultracold And Superhot,
    Our Inability To Create Singularity


    A. From "Strings Link the Ultracold with the Superhot"
    [Link was removed]
    Perfect liquids suggest theory’s math mirrors something real

    "When the universe was very young, and still superhot from the aftermath of the Big Bang, plasma should have been the only state of matter around. And that’s what scientists at Brookhaven expected to see when they smashed gold ions together at 99.99 percent of the speed of light using a machine called RHIC (for Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider). RHIC physicists thought the ion collisions would melt the gold’s protons and neutrons into a hot plasma of quarks and gluons at a temperature of a trillion kelvins, replicating conditions similar to those a microsecond after the birth of the universe. But instead of a gaslike plasma, the physicists reported in 2005, RHIC served up a hot quark soup, behaving more like a liquid than a plasma or gas."


    B. The expectation of Brookhaven scientists was a bit unrealistic

    The "aftermath of the Big Bang" lasted much less than 10^-35 seconds. This is evidenced by the fact that "Gravity Is THE Manifestation Of The Onset Of Cosmic Inflation Cataclysm" :

    [Link was removed] #1950
    and
    [Link was removed] #1982

    With all respect due to the scientists at Brookhaven it is very difficult to expect that they can recreate the state of pre big-bang energy-mass singularity.

    Commonsense is still the best scientific approach.


    Respectfully suggesting,

    Dov Henis
    (Comments From The 22nd Century)
    Dov Henis Dov Henis
    Apr. 17, 2009 at 10:27pm
  • Commonsensible PS To
    Gravity Limits Link Ultracold And Superhot,
    Our Inability To Create Singularity


    A. From "Strings Link the Ultracold with the Superhot"
    [Link was removed]

    A new truth always has to contend with many difficulties,” the German physicist Max Planck said decades ago. “If it were not so, it would have been discovered much sooner.”


    B. IMO gravity is attempted reversal of inflation

    To me, a simple uninformed one, E=mc^2 is a derived formula, whereas E=Total[m(1 + D)] is a commonsensical descriptive concept.

    I intuitively regard both the ultracold and superhot liquids as being in a confined space and "striving but unable" to overcome D, to render D=0.

    I also intuitively regard accelerated collisions smashups as attempted "reverse inflations" in the sense that Newton's law of universal gravitation seems to me as "reverse inflation".


    Dov Henis
    (Comments From The 22nd Century)
    Dov Henis Dov Henis
    Apr. 20, 2009 at 1:15am
  • There is no extra dimensions at all.

    New atom model expalin everything with one rorce. Pressure.

    Atoms nucleus energy explode all a time in space who dont change at all. Same time expanding atoms nucleus radiate energywaves who have a nature of electrons and particle. Also electrons and particle explode all a time and radiate energywaves.

    Electrons just moving to next exploding atoms nucleus and get this explode faster and faster.

    Then we dont need drawing force at all. Then we dont expanding space at all. Then we dont neer curving space at all. Then we dont need dark energy or dark matter at all.

    [Link was removed]

    .
    change of pressure change of pressure
    Apr. 20, 2009 at 6:59am

  • Lets check out first that


    [Link was removed]

    and then that


    [Link was removed]


    Then you post to think!

    i am sire, you found same thing what i am already found.

    Just remember onesimpleprinciple model of atoms.

    Atoms nucleus explode all a time and radiate energywaves and with this energywaves atoms nucleus get next exploding atoms nucleus exploding energy etc.
    change of pressure change of pressure
    Apr. 21, 2009 at 10:18am
  • With better english

    [Link was removed]
    change of pressure change of pressure
    Apr. 21, 2009 at 12:27pm
  • Wow, I thought I was a crackpot, but this onesimpleprinciple guy takes the cake.
    Fleawest Fleawest
    Apr. 21, 2009 at 12:56pm
  • Expanding = exploding



    Did you know that everything that exists, it is one and the same thing which we canname energy.

    This energy is not the matter, instead it is what exists inside of the atomic
    nucleus of the matter and its density changes all the time to less density.

    When there is no energy coming from outside, then it gets cold because the energy emission does not get from the atomic nucleus more of this energy to burst.For this reason, throughout expanding atomic nucleus do not push themselves away from each other so powerfully as earlier, at which point that into the atomic nucleus comes more of this energy in particles.

    At the end, the so called quarks existing in different atomic nucleus interlace and form a quark unit.
    Also, the energy existing inside the quarks changes all the time to less dense energy,moreover quarks burst out energy waves.

    In the center of a quark unit big enough arises a sufficient pressure, whereupon quarks get to burst a lot of
    energy towards each other. Therefore this quark unit starts to emit abondant energy from itself.
    This way from the absolute zero we jump straight to high temperatures.

    Let's talk about temperature in the absence of atom's oscillations, but rather how much energy one piece emits.
    Also there is a meaning about the density of the emission: How the particles are and how close they are to one another.







    .






    Hot in the direction of cold!

    Dense in the direction of a less dense space!

    The space does not change!

    The energy transforms to a less dense energy!

    At the same time an energy that is transforming to a less dense energy, pushes itself towards an area where exists less energy. This happens because the energy transforming to less dense doesn´t have te room to stay in a equally small area that doesn´t change.

    Also the energy in the qvarks transforms all the time into a less dense energy.

    From outside there doesn´t come almost at all energy towards the atomcores when reaching the absolute zero point. To atomcores in which the energy transforms all the time into a less dense energy. This way the expanding
    atomcores do not expload their energy towards each other and they don´t push themselves away from each other so powerfully.

    Eventually the qvarks of the separate atomcores interlock with each other. A big consentration of the qvarks has developed. Also in the middle of the centre a pressure has been developed. This pressure is based on a fact that
    the qvarks radiate their energy towards each other. With this energy they push themselves away from each other according to the same relation as they expand.

    An adequate pressure is developed in the middle of the big expanding consentration of the qvarks and this pressure makes the qvarks to explode a lot of their energy towards each other.

    This is why a lot of energy begins to burst / radiate from the qvark consentration.

    This is how extremely cold turns in a moment into extremely hot.

    The heath is not a atomcores. The vibration of the atoms is consequence of outward coming energy that reaches the atomcores.

    The so called "Caloric" is not a chemical element.

    "Caloric" is the one and the same thing that exists in all atomcores. It can be called energy. Or with any other name.
    Energy transforms all the time to a less dense energy in a space that does not change.

    Also the movement of all the atoms of the world happens towards cold in other words towards a space where is less energy!
    The expanding atoms push themselves towards a less dense area in space.

    The energy of the planets push themself away from the sun in a curved orbit. There is more and denser energy than outside the sun.

    The stars push themselves in a curved orbit away from the centre of the galaxy where is more and denser energy than in the outside of the galaxy.

    The energy of the visible universe pushes itself away from the area that exists really far outside the visible universe.In that area there exists more and denser energy than in the visible universe. Outside that area energy is less denser.

    The eergy of the visible universe pushes itself towards the cold. In other words towards a less dense area in a space that does not change.



    Could it be possible that the particles of a laserbeam absorb the energy radiating from the expanding/exploding qvarks with them?
    This way energy radiating from the separate atomcores can not reach the expanding/exploding atomcores nextby?

    After that expanding/exploding qvarks of the separately expanding/exploding atomcores overlapp.

    An energyconcentration that has composed of very dense energy has born and its hot / dense energy is able to keep itself hot / dense.
    This way the energy of Bosen-Einstein condensate does not radiate nearly at all its energy away from itself!

    (Maybe later The expanding/exploding qvarks have locked themselves to expand side by side?)

    In the area between the expanding/exploding qvarks the moving photon meets so much dense energy that its movement slows down significantly.

    For example the speed of a runner slows down involuntarily when the runner meets a traffic jam, but as soon as the runner meets a less dense space that does not transform, he can accelerate his speed. To accelerate his speed the runner must transform his body energyto a less dense energy! In other words the runner must make the substance that he consists of to transform faster than usually in a certain area to a less dense energy.

    If the energy f a photon passing through the Bosen-Einstein condensate does not transform it is based on the fact that the particules are able to recycle the energy they meet! Also the cores of expanding atoms are able to recycle the energy coming towards the core!
    _________________
    change of pressure change of pressure
    Apr. 23, 2009 at 12:48pm
  • Another fascinating article. I wonder if this points to another major advance in physics. I’ve been watching science advance through the pages of Science News ever since I was a child in the early 1960s, when my late aunt bought a subscription for me.
    Robert Fowler Robert Fowler
    Apr. 23, 2009 at 4:28pm
  • I wonder if what we're seeing here is the start of an "intuitive" understanding of quantum effects. Remembering Einstein's comment about "spooky action at a distance," I can't help wondering if a couple of "entangled" particles might be connected along one of the "extra" dimensions, and, thus, that the observed "opposite spin" of the entangled, physically separated (in 4-space) particles is nothing more than an observation that the two entangled particles are not, in fact, separated in at least one of the additional dimensions.
    Peter Trenholme Peter Trenholme
    Apr. 27, 2009 at 3:40pm
  • concerning the "intuitive" understanding of quantum effects" you can read a few poste of mine here [Link was removed]
    Zephir Zephir
    Apr. 27, 2009 at 5:45pm
  • Even though I dont know much about strings this is very interesting to say the least.

    I guess there goes our whole global warming theory. If the sun is going into a weak cycle do they think that earth will warm up? It is foolish to believe we are responsible for global warming. It is as a concept as anthropocentric as religion is. How can they not take in consideration the role of the sun?

    [Link was removed]



    Wilbert Smith Wilbert Smith
    Dec. 9, 2009 at 10:32am
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    webalem net webalem net
    Dec. 18, 2009 at 3:43am
  • Another fascinating article. I wonder if this points to another major advance in physics. I’ve been watching science advance through the pages of Science News ever since I was a child in the early 1960s, when my late aunt bought a subscription for me.

    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
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  • Kovtun, P.K., D.T. Son, and A.O. 2005. Starinets viscosity in strongly interacting quantum field theories from Black Hole physics. Physical Review Letters 94(March 25):111601.http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0405231
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