Physicists capture ‘second sound’ for the first time — after nearly 100 years of searching

Scientists have captured direct images of heat behaving like sound — an elusive phenomenon called ‘second sound’ — for the very first time.

Imaged within an exotic superfluid state of cold lithium-6 atoms by a new heat-mapping technique, the phenomenon shows heat moving as a wave, bouncing like sound around its container.

Understanding the way that second sound moves could help scientists predict how heat flows inside ultradense neutron stars and high-temperature superconductors — one of the “holy grails” of physics whose development would enable near-lossless energy transmission. The researchers published their findings in the journal Science.

“It’s as if you had a tank of water and made one half nearly boiling,” study co-author Richard Fletcher, an assistant professor of physics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), said in a statement. “If you then watched, the water itself might look totally calm, but suddenly the other side is hot, and then the other side is hot, and the heat goes back and forth, while the water looks totally still.”

Typically heat spreads from a localized source, slowly dissipating across an entire material as it raises the temperature across it.

But exotic materials called superfluids needn’t play by these rules. Created when clouds of fermions (which include protons, neutrons and electrons) are cooled to temperatures approaching absolute zero, atoms inside superfluids pair up and travel frictionlessly throughout the material.

Related: Physicists make record-breaking ‘quantum vortex’ to study the mysteries of black holes

See more here Livescience.com

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