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illustration by Matteo Ceccanti and Simone Cassandra. |
An international research team led by The University of Manchester has
succeeded in observing the so-called Schwinger effect, an elusive process
that normally occurs only in cosmic events. By applying high currents
through specially designed graphene-based devices, the team - based at the
National Graphene Institute - succeeded in producing particle-antiparticle
pairs from a vacuum.
A vacuum is assumed to be completely empty space, without any matter or
elementary particles. However, it was predicted by Nobel laureate Julian
Schwinger 70 years ago that intense electric or magnetic fields can break
down the vacuum and spontaneously create elementary particles.
This requires truly cosmic-strength fields such as those around magnetars or
created transitorily during high-energy collisions of charged nuclei. It has
been a longstanding goal of particle physics to probe these theoretical
predictions experimentally and some are currently planned for high-energy
colliders around the world.
Now an international, Manchester-led research team – headed by another Nobel
laureate, Prof Andre Geim, in collaboration with colleagues from UK, Spain,
US and Japan - has used graphene to mimic the Schwinger production of
electron and positron pairs.
Exceptionally strong electric fields
In the January 2022 issue of Science, they report specially designed devices
such as narrow constrictions and superlattices made from graphene, which
allowed the researchers to achieve exceptionally strong electric fields in a
simple table-top setup. Spontaneous production of electron and hole pairs
was clearly observed (holes are a solid-state analogue of subatomic
particles called positrons) and the process's details agreed well with
theoretical predictions.
The scientists also observed another unusual high-energy process that so far
has no analogies in particle physics and astrophysics. They filled their
simulated vacuum with electrons and accelerated them to the maximum velocity
allowed by graphene’s vacuum, which is 1/300 of the speed of light. At
this point, something seemingly impossible happened: electrons seemed to
become superluminous, providing an electric current higher than allowed by
general rules of quantum condensed matter physics. The origin of this effect
was explained as spontaneous generation of additional charge carriers
(holes). Theoretical description of this process provided by the research
team is rather different from the Schwinger one for the empty space.
“People usually study electronic properties using tiny electric fields that
allows easier analysis and theoretical description. We decided to push the
strength of electric fields as much as possible using different experimental
tricks not to burn our devices,” said the paper’s first author Dr Alexey
Berduygin, a post-doctoral researcher in The University of Manchester's
Department of Physics and Astronomy.
Co-lead author from the same department Dr Na Xin added: “We just wondered
what could happen at this extreme. To our surprise, it was the Schwinger
effect rather than smoke coming out of our set-up.”
Another leading contributor, Dr Roshan Krishna Kumar from the Institute of
Photonic Sciences in Barcelona, said: “When we first saw the spectacular
characteristics of our superlattice devices, we thought ‘wow … it could be
some sort of new superconductivity’. Although the response closely resembles
those routinely observed in superconductors, we soon found that the puzzling
behaviour was not superconductivity but rather something in the domain of
astrophysics and particle physics. It is curious to see such parallels
between distant disciplines.”
The research is also important for the development of future electronic
devices based on two-dimensional quantum materials and establishes limits on
wiring made from graphene that was already known for its remarkable ability
to sustain ultra-high electric currents.
Reference:
Alexey I. Berdyugin et al. Out-of-equilibrium criticalities in graphene
superlattices.
DOI: 10.1126/science.abi8627
Tags:
Physics
Whenever there is an article about the "nothingness" from which "something" (i.e. the universe) was created, I am stunned and a little appalled when I realize that the "nothing" mentioned is anything but! If it is not virtual particles or quantum foam, it is energy fields.. How the fuck can anyone use the word "nothing" about any of that? It is anything BUT nothingness. Ridiculous!
ReplyDeleteExactly. "They filled their simulated vacuum with electrons and accelerated them to the maximum velocity allowed by graphene’s vacuum"... a carbon-based graphene interface/superlattice, resulting in superconductivity-parallel positrons and electrons... it's fascinating, but the exact opposite of "nothing"... creating something, from something. nothing is ever "created" from nothing...
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