A new, naturally occurring state of matter

RedFusion

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Didn't see this posted anywhere, so I apologize if it already was. The article on this is really cool and interesting, it's a bit long though, so I'll only quote the beginning.

In 1998, just after he won a share of the Nobel prize for physics, Robert Laughlin of Stanford University in California was asked how his discovery of "particles" with fractional charge, now called quasi-particles, would affect the lives of ordinary people. "It probably won't," he said, "unless people are concerned about how the universe works."

Well, people were. Xiao-Gang Wen at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Michael Levin at Harvard University ran with Laughlin's ideas and have come up with a prediction for a new state of matter, and even a tantalising picture of the nature of space-time itself. Levin presented their work at the Topological Quantum Computing conference at the University of California, Los Angeles, early this month.

The first hint that a new type of matter may exist came in 1983. "Twenty five years ago we thought we understood everything about how matter changes phase," says Wen. "Then along came an experiment that opened up a whole new world."

Link to the rest of the article
 
Looks very interesting. New theories all over the place, most of them probably wrong, all with crazy predictions. I love physics :D
 
Looks very interesting. New theories all over the place, most of them probably wrong, all with crazy predictions. I love physics :D

As for the crazy part, I refer you to Nils Bohr : "Your threory is crazy, but not crazy enough to be true".
 
As for the crazy part, I refer you to Nils Bohr : "Your threory is crazy, but not crazy enough to be true".

And they were right!

The fact that this may have applications in quantum computers is totally awesome.
 
Just what we need, another state of matter to memorize :p.
 
Just what we need, another state of matter to memorize :p.

There's quite a lot of states of matter outside of the normal solid-liquid-gas states already.

Besides, you never even took thermodynamics, so the last thing you should worry about is memorizing the properties of matter. :p
 
Hm, can someone put it in somewhat simpler words, just what that state of matter is, and how it's different from the known ones? I've read the article, but can't really understand that much, except it having to do something with partial charges...
 
As for the crazy part, I refer you to Nils Bohr : "Your threory is crazy, but not crazy enough to be true".

By crazy I mean "potentially revolutionary, and way beyond my possible understanding" :p
 
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