• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

“Strange Metal” Ytterbium Gets Even Stranger When Hit With Gamma Rays

March 14, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

When quantum physicists refer to something as “strange” you know it’s really doing something odd. People who’ve got comfortable with superposition and “spooky action at a distance” have a high bar for what is weird. Yet certain elements have earned the category “strange metals” because how they conduct electricity is different from more familiar metals and is yet to be understood. The latest example of this quirkiness, more noticeably strange to physicists than others, is that has two absorption peaks for radiation instead of the usual one.

Ytterbium combines strangeness in its conductivity with possibly the most improbable-sounding name among the naturally existing elements. It’s not particularly rare, being more common in the Earth’s crust than about half the sub-Uranic elements, but it’s hardly familiar.

Advertisement

A Japanese-American collaboration has explored ytterbium’s strange conductive behavior, and report in a new paper that the weirdness goes all the way down.

Its interest to Dr Yashar Komijani of the University of Cincinnati is that, when it carries current, ytterbium doesn’t behave like familiar conductors like copper or aluminum. “In a metal, you have a sea of electrons moving in the background on a lattice of ions,” Kominjani said in a statement. “But a marvelous thing happens with quantum mechanics. You can forget about the complications of the lattice of ions. Instead, they behave as if they are in a vacuum.”

Under cold conditions, ytterbium is more conductive than theory should allow. This could prove useful in the search for high-temperature superconducting materials, but it also presents an anomaly Komijani and co-authors hope to explain.

The authors exposed ß-YbAlB4  – an alloy of ytterbium, aluminum, and boron – to gamma rays to see how the response varied with temperature and pressure. This is slightly ironic, because one of the main uses for ytterbium is as a gamma ray producer. 

Advertisement

Gamma rays are usually produced through radioactive decay, but each decay process produces photons of a particular energy. To produce gamma rays on demand, the team accelerated protons in a synchrotron and used the gamma rays emitted when they smashed into walls to perform Mössbauer spectroscopy, a process that can detect very small changes in the chemical environment of nuclei.

When the temperatures were kept very low, the alloy shifted from “strange metal” to a “Fermi liquid”, the familiar state of most elements, as the pressure was raised.

The authors witnessed charge fluctuations producing a double peak in the absorption spectrum. “We interpret this spectrum as a single nuclear transition, modulated by nearby electronic valence fluctuations,” they write. 

The observations depend on the timing of the charge fluctuations, which occur in a period of a billionth of a second. By quantum standards, this is exceptionally slow, something the team attributes to vibrations in the lattice.

Advertisement

While admitting they are not certain, the authors think their results may represent a shift back and forth between what would be considered Yb2+ and Yb3+ ionic states in classical physics, but is more complex in a quantum world. 

The authors think the double peak may not be unique to ytterbium, but instead may be a distinctive feature of all strange metals, one which can be used both to identify and explain them.

Ytterbium got its strange name from Ytterby, a Swedish village near which a sample containing it was found. It is classified as a rare Earth, but at 0.3 parts per million in the Earth’s crust, it’s more common than most other members of that category, including its neighbors on the periodic table thulium and lutetium.

The study is published in Science

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Poland condemns jailing of Belarus protest leaders
  2. China energy crunch triggers alarm, pleas for more coal
  3. China proposes adding cryptocurrency mining to ‘negative list’ of industries
  4. Stranded Dolphins’ Brains Show Signs Of Alzheimer’s-Like Disease

Source Link: “Strange Metal” Ytterbium Gets Even Stranger When Hit With Gamma Rays

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • NASA Responds To Claims That Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Is An Advanced Alien Spacecraft
  • Millions Of Tons Of Gold Are In Earth’s Oceans, Potentially Worth Over $2 Quadrillion
  • The Race Back To The Moon: US Vs China, Will What Happens Next Change The Future?
  • NOAA Issues G3 Geomagnetic Storm Warning As 500,000 Kilometer Hole Sends Solar Wind At Earth
  • Lasting 776 Days, This Is The Longest Case Of COVID-19 Ever Recorded
  • Living Cement: The Microbes In Your Walls Could Power The Future
  • What Can Your Earwax Reveal About Your Health?
  • Ever Seen A Giraffe Use An Inhaler? Now You Can, And It’s Incredibly Wholesome
  • Martian Mudstone Has Features That Might Be Biosignatures, New Brain Implant Can Decode Your Internal Monologue, And Much More This Week
  • Crocodiles Weren’t All Blood-Thirsty Killers, Some Evolved To Be Plant-Eating Vegetarians
  • Stratospheric Warming Event May Be Unfolding In The Southern Polar Vortex, Shaking Up Global Weather Systems
  • 15 Years Ago, Bees In Brooklyn Appeared Red After Snacking Where They Shouldn’t
  • Carnian Pluvial Event: It Rained For 2 Million Years — And It Changed Planet Earth Forever
  • There’s Volcanic Unrest At The Campi Flegrei Caldera – Here’s What We Know
  • The “Rumpelstiltskin Effect”: When Just Getting A Diagnosis Is Enough To Start The Healing
  • In 1962, A Boy Found A Radioactive Capsule And Brought It Inside His House — With Tragic Results
  • This Cute Creature Has One Of The Largest Genomes Of Any Mammal, With 114 Chromosomes
  • Little Air And Dramatic Evolutionary Changes Await Future Humans On Mars
  • “Black Hole Stars” Might Solve Unexplained JWST Discovery
  • Pretty In Purple: Why Do Some Otters Have Purple Teeth And Bones? It’s All Down To Their Spiky Diets
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version