Thought some here might find this interesting . . .

PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE
The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News
Number 843  October 18, 2007  by Phillip F. Schewe
www.aip.org/pnu

RELATIVISTIC THERMODYNAMICS.  Einstein*s special theory of relativity 
has formulas, called Lorentz transformations, that convert time or 
distance intervals from a resting frame of reference to a frame 
zooming by at nearly the speed of light.  But how about 
temperature?  That is, if a speeding observer, carrying her 
thermometer with her, tries to measure the temperature of a gas in a 
stationary bottle, what temperature will she measure?  A new look at 
this contentious subject suggests that the temperature will be the 
same as that measured in the rest frame.  In other words, moving 
bodies will not appear hotter or colder. You*d think that such an 
issue would have been settled decades ago, but this is not the 
case.  Einstein and Planck thought, at one time, that the speeding 
thermometer would measure a lower temperature, while others thought 
the temperature would be higher.  One problem is how to define or 
measure a gas temperature in the first place.  James Clerk Maxwell in 
1866 enunciated his famous formula predicting that the distribution 
of gas particle velocities would look like a
Gaussian-shaped curve.  But how would this curve appear to be for 
someone flying past?  What would the equivalent average gas 
temperature be to this other observer?  Jorn Dunkel and his 
colleagues at the Universitat Augsburg (Germany) and the Universidad 
de Sevilla (Spain) could not exactly make direct measurements (no one 
has figured out how to maintain a contained gas at relativistic 
speeds in a terrestrial lab), but they performed extensive 
simulations of the matter.  Dunkel 
([EMAIL PROTECTED] ) says that some astrophysical 
systems might eventually offer a chance to experimentally judge the 
issue.  In general the effort to marry thermodynamics with special 
relativity is still at an early stage. It is not exactly known how 
several thermodynamic parameters change at high speeds.  Absolute 
zero, Dunkel says, will always be absolute zero, even for 
quickly-moving observers.   But producing proper Lorentz 
transformations for other quantities such as entropy will be trickier 
to do.  (Cubero et al., Physical Review Letters, 26 October 2007; 
text available to journalists at www.aip.org/physnews/select)

NUCLEAR SYRUP.  A new measurement of how long it takes certain nuclei 
to fission into large fragments suggests that the *liquid-drop* model 
of the nucleus should be replaced with a
*nuclear syrup*model.  Fission is the most dramatic form of 
radioactivity, when a nucleus loses not merely a small fragment-such 
as an electron, gamma ray, or an alpha particle-but actually splits 
in half.  The fission of many nuclei has been studied through the 
years, most famously uranium-235.  As early as 1939 Niels Bohr and 
John Wheeler tried to model the nature of fission by saying that the 
nucleus is like a drop of water in which the tendency of the drop to 
fly apart is checked by the force of surface tension; something like 
this, they
said, kept a nucleus intact until such time as the rapid oscillations 
of an unstable nucleus became so large that the *surface tension* 
normally keeping the nucleus together was
overcome.  Sometimes as a prelude to fission, the nucleus relieves 
some of its instability and effectively reduces its internal *nuclear 
temperature* by flinging out neutrons or gamma rays.  In fact, the 
lifetime for fission has been indirectly measured by observing those 
cast-off neutrons.  The results suggest that the old liquid-drop 
model was off by a factor of ten or so
  in predicting lifetimes.  Some scientists have begun to think that 
an additional stickiness in the nuclear substance is at work, which 
slows up the fission process. An experiment at Oak Ridge National 
Laboratory has probed this proposition by creating several 
fissionable nuclei artificially with heavy-ion beams bombarding a 
tungsten target; the projectile and target nuclei temporarily fuse 
together, travel a short distance through the tungsten crystal, and 
then fission.  The spacing of the atoms in the crystal is used as a 
reference to measure the recoil of the composite nucleus before 
fission.  According to team member Jens Andersen of the University of 
Aarhus in Denmark ([EMAIL PROTECTED], 45-8942-3713), the Oak Ridge 
experiment suggests that the fission lifetimes are even longer (an 
additional factor of ten to one hundred) than those derived with the 
more indirect neutron-emission method.  This could imply that the 
nuclear shape does not oscillate as rapidly as a water droplet would 
but instead deforms very slowly like a drop of syrup.  (Andersen et 
al., Physical Review Letters, 19 October 2007; journalists can obtain 
the text from www.aip.org/physnews/select)

***********
PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE is a digest of physics news items arising from 
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-- Ronn!  :)



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