Large-scale cousin of elusive 'magnetic monopoles' found at NIST
Any child can tell you that a magnet has a "north" and a "south" pole, and that if you break it into two pieces, you invariably get two smaller magnets with two poles of their own. But scientists have spent the better part of the last eight decades trying to find, in essence, a magnet with only one pole. A team working at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has found one.* In 1931, Paul Dirac, one of the rock stars of the physics world, made the somewhat startling prediction that "magnetic monopoles," or particles possessing only a single pole—either north or south—should exist. His conclusion stemmed from examining a famous set of equations that explains the relationship between electricity and magnetism. Maxwell's equations apply to long-known electric monopole particles, such as negatively charged electrons and positively charged protons; but despite Dirac's prediction, no one has found magnetic monopole particles.
Now, a research team working at NIST's Center for Neutron Research (NCNR), led by Hiroaki Kadowaki of Tokyo Metropolitan University, has found the next best thing. By creating a compound that under certain conditions forms large, molecule-sized monopoles that behave exactly as the predicted particles should, the team has found a way to explore magnetic monopoles in the laboratory, not just on the chalkboard. (Another research team, working simultaneously, published similar findings in Science last month.**)
"These are not the monopole particles Dirac predicted—ours are huge in comparison—but they behave like them in every way," says Jeff Lynn, a NIST physicist. "Their properties will allow us to test how theoretical monopole particles should behave and interact."
The team created their monopoles in a compound made of oxygen, titanium and dysprosium that, when cooled to nearly absolute zero, forms what scientists call "spin ice." The material freezes into four-sided crystals (a pyramid with a triangular base) and the magnetic orientation, or "spin," of the ions at each of the four tips align so that their spins are balanced—two spins point inward and two outward. But using neutron beams at the NCNR, the team found they could knock one of the spins askew so that instead three point in, one out … "creating a monopole, or at least its mathematical equivalent," Lynn said.
Because every crystal pyramid shares its four tips with adjacent pyramids, flipping the spin of one tip creates an "anti-monopole" in the next pyramid over. The team has created monopole-antimonopole pairs repeatedly in a relatively large chunk of the spin ice, allowing them to confirm the monopoles' existence through advanced imaging techniques such as neutron scattering.
While the findings will not tell the team where in the universe to search for Dirac's still-elusive magnetic monopole particles, Lynn says that examining the spin ice will permit scientists to test certain predictions about monopoles. "Maxwell's equations indicate that monopoles should obey Coulomb's Law, which indicates their interaction should weaken as distance between them increases," he says. "Using the spin ice crystals, we can test ideas like this."
Source: National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
Related
- Magnetic monopoles detected in a real magnet for the first timeThu, 3 Sep 2009, 15:30:48 EDT
- Novel NIST connector uses magnets for leak-free microfluidic devicesWed, 18 Nov 2009, 11:11:18 EST
- For refrigeration problems, a magnetically attractive solutionWed, 11 Feb 2009, 12:23:52 EST
- Neutron researchers discover widely sought property in magnetic semiconductorTue, 25 Nov 2008, 17:09:03 EST
- NIST researchers put a new spin on atomic musical chairsWed, 2 Dec 2009, 9:15:48 EST
Other sources
- Single molecule magnets with a twistfrom Chemistry WorldThu, 8 Oct 2009, 10:35:27 EDT
- Large-Scale Cousin Of Elusive 'Magnetic Monopoles' Found At NISTfrom Science DailyThu, 8 Oct 2009, 0:35:47 EDT
- Large-scale cousin of elusive 'magnetic monopoles' found at NISTfrom Science CentricWed, 7 Oct 2009, 10:07:27 EDT
- Large-scale cousin of elusive 'magnetic monopoles' foundfrom PhysorgTue, 6 Oct 2009, 19:07:31 EDT
- Large-scale cousin of elusive 'magnetic monopoles' found at NISTfrom Science BlogTue, 6 Oct 2009, 18:42:26 EDT
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