Saturn. Experiments at Sandia National Laboratories' Z machine may explain why the planet is so hot.
Credit: Image courtesy of Sandia National Laboratories
Planets tend to cool as they get older, but
Saturn is hotter than astrophysicists say it should be without some
additional energy source.
The unexplained heat has caused a two-billion-year discrepancy for
computer models estimating Saturn's age. "Models that correctly predict
Jupiter to be 4.5 billion years old find Saturn to be only 2.5 billion
years old," says Thomas Mattsson, manager of Sandia's
high-energy-density physics theory group.
Experiments at Sandia's Z machine may have helped solve that problem
when they verified an 80-year-old proposition that molecular hydrogen,
normally an insulator, becomes metallic if squeezed by enough pressure.
Physicists Eugene Wigner and Hilliard Huntington predicted in 1935 that a
pressured lattice of hydrogen molecules would break up into individual
hydrogen atoms, releasing free-floating electrons that could carry a
current.
"That long-ago prediction would explain Saturn's temperature because,
when hydrogen metallizes and mixes with helium in a dense liquid, it
can release helium rain," said Sandia researcher Mike Desjarlais. Helium
rain is an energy source that can alter the evolution of a planet.
"Essentially, helium rain would keep Saturn warmer than calculations
of planetary age alone would predict," said Marcus Knudson. Knudson and
Desjarlais are the lead authors of a June 26 Science article, "Direct
observation of an abrupt insulator-to-metal transition in dense liquid
deuterium."
This proposed density-driven hydrogen transition had never been observed experimentally until Sandia's recent experiments.
The tests ran on Sandia's Z machine, the world's most powerful
pulsed-power machine, which sends a huge but precisely tuned
sub-microsecond pulse of electricity at a target. The correspondingly
strong magnetic field surrounding the pulse was used to shocklessly
squeeze deuterium -- a heavier variant of hydrogen -- at relatively low
temperatures. Previous experiments elsewhere used gas guns to shock the
gas. This increased its pressure but at the same time raised its
temperature beyond the range of interest for the density-driven phase
transition.
"We started at 20 degrees Kelvin, where hydrogen is a liquid, and
sent a few hundred kilobar shock -- a tiny flyer plate pushed by Z's
magnetic field into the hydrogen -- to warm the liquid," said Knudson.
"Then we used Z's magnetic field to further compress the hydrogen
shocklessly, which kept it right above the liquid-solid line at about
1,000 degrees K."
Said Desjarlais, "When the liquid was compressed to over 12 times its
starting density, we saw the signs that it became atomic rather than
molecular. The transition, at three megabars of pressure, gives
theorists a solid figure to use in their calculations and helps identify
the best theoretical framework for modeling these extreme conditions."
The results need to be plugged into astrophysical models to see whether
the now-confirmed transition to atomic hydrogen significantly decreases
the age gap between the two huge planets.
"The Sandia work shows that dense hydrogen can be metallic, which in
turn changes the coexistence of hydrogen and helium in the planet," says
Mattsson. "The mechanism of helium rain that has been proposed is
therefore very plausible, given our results, but the scientific
discussion will continue over the next few years in establishing a new
consensus."
Interestingly, the determination that a metallic phase was reached
was made optically. "There's too much electrical noise in Z to make an
electrical test, though we plan to directly measure current down the
road," Knudson said.
Optical tests rely on the transition from zero reflectivity (insulators) to the reflectivity achieved by metals.
"The only way you get reflectivity is when a material is metallic,"
Knudson said. Reflectivity was tested across the visible spectrum --
from 450 to 750 nanometers. "The experiment itself produced light," he
said. "We collected it, put it through a spectrometer to disperse it and
passed it into a camera to observe it."
When the hydrogen insulator reached enough pressure to become
metallized, the researchers observed 45 percent reflectivity, an
excellent agreement with theoretical calculations, said Desjarlais.
"This is a very nice merging of theory and experiment," he said. "We
threw all our computational tools -- which are significant -- at
providing verification and interpretation of the complex experimental
observations at Z."
The work was done in collaboration with professor Ronald Redmer's
research group at University of Rostock in Germany and is a part of the Z
Fundamental Science Program at Sandia. The multidisciplinary team
included researchers with expertise in innovative experimental design,
diagnostics and pulse-shaping capabilities, matched with theoretical
analysis using methods based on quantum mechanics.
Other authors besides Knudson, Desjarlais and Mattsson include Redmer
and Andreas Becker at University of Rostock and Ray Lemke, Kyle
Cochrane, Mark Savage, and Dave Bliss at Sandia.
The Z machine is a National High Energy Density Science Facility supported by the National Nuclear Security Administration.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
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Sandia National Laboratories.
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