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Challenging a 300-year-old law of friction

Researchers at the University of Konstanz have uncovered a new mechanism of sliding friction: resistance to motion that arises without any mechanical contact, driven purely by collective magnetic dynamics. The study, published in Nature Materials, shows that friction does not necessarily increase steadily with load, as postulated by Amontons’ law—one of the oldest and most fundamental empirical laws of physics—but can instead exhibit a pronounced maximum when internal magnetic ordering becomes frustrated.

For more than three centuries, Amontons’ law has linked friction directly to load, reflecting the everyday experience that heavier objects are harder to move; for example, pushing a heavy piece of furniture requires far more effort than sliding a light chair. This behavior is commonly attributed to tiny deformations of the surfaces in contact under load, which increase the number of microscopic contact points and thereby enhance friction.

In most classical situations, these deformations remain small and do not qualitatively change the internal structure of the materials during sliding. It is therefore not clear whether Amontons’ law will also hold when sliding induces much stronger internal reconfigurations, as can occur in magnetic materials where motion can modify the magnetic order.

Clearest evidence yet that giant planets spin faster than their cosmic lookalikes

For decades, astronomers have struggled to differentiate giant planets from brown dwarfs, a class of objects more massive than planets but too small to ignite nuclear fusion like true stars. Through a telescope, these cosmic lookalikes can have overlapping brightness, temperatures, and even atmospheric fingerprints. The striking similarity leaves astronomers unsure if they have observed an oversized planet or an undersized star. Now, a Northwestern University-led team has uncovered a crucial clue that separates the two: how fast they spin.

In a new study, astrophysicists found the clearest evidence yet that giant planets spin significantly faster than their brown dwarf counterparts. The new results suggest rotation measurements may provide a powerful new diagnostic for classifying these indistinguishable populations and suggest that these two objects evolve differently, perhaps even forming through distinct processes.

The study was published in The Astronomical Journal. It marks the largest survey of spin measurements of directly imaged extrasolar planets and brown dwarfs to date.

Bell-bottoms today, miniskirts tomorrow: Math reveals fashion’s 20-year cycle

Fashion insiders and beauty magazines have long cited the “20-year-rule”—the idea that clothing trends often resurface every two decades. According to Northwestern University scientists, that observation isn’t just anecdotal. It’s a mathematical reality.

In a new study, the Northwestern team developed a new mathematical model showing that fashion trends tend to cycle roughly every 20 years. By analyzing roughly 37,000 images of women’s clothing spanning from 1869 to today, the team found that styles rise in popularity, fall out of favor and then eventually experience renewal. Along with supporting common perceptions about the life cycles of fads, the researchers say these results could help explain how new ideas spread in society.

The study’s lead author, Emma Zajdela, will present these findings on Tuesday, March 17, at the American Physical Society (APS) Global Physics Summit in Denver. Her talk, “Back in Fashion: Modeling the Cyclical Dynamics of Trends,” is part of the session “Statistical Physics of Networks and Complex Society Systems.”

Discrete time crystal acts as a usable sensor for weak magnetic oscillations

The bizarre properties of discrete time crystals could be harnessed to detect extremely subtle oscillations of magnetic fields, physicists in the US and Germany have revealed. Publishing their results in Nature Physics, a team led by Ashok Ajoy at the University of California, Berkeley, show for the first time that these exotic materials could have practical uses far beyond their current status as an impractical curiosity.

Discrete time crystals (DTCs) are an exotic phase of matter which break entirely from the rules which apply to classical materials. Whereas an ordinary crystal is made up of atomic or molecular patterns that repeat at regular intervals in space, DTCs have structures that constantly oscillate in repeating cycles when driven by an external protocol, without ever reaching thermal equilibrium.

“Since their initial experimental demonstrations in 2017, there has been enormous excitement surrounding these states,” explains co-author Paul Schindler at the Max Planck Institute of Complex Systems. “Yet a persistent question has remained unanswered: can this exotic order be harnessed for practical applications?”

Astronomers May Have Seen Colliding Black Holes Trigger a Blaze of Light

A brief blaze of gamma and X-ray light that lit up Earth telescopes in November 2024 may have come from an unexpected source.

Just a few seconds earlier, from the same tiny corner of the sky, LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA had detected the telltale gravitational wave signal of two black holes colliding. These massive events are some of the most extreme in the Universe; even so, they’re not generally expected to produce detectable light.

A team led by astronomer Shu-Rui Zhang of the University of Science and Technology of China has linked the extraordinary detection to an even more extraordinary set of possible circumstances: the collision, the researchers believe, may have taken place in the enormous, roiling disk of dust and gas surrounding a third, supermassive black hole – the host galaxy’s active galactic nucleus (AGN).

Physicists break longstanding high-temperature superconductivity record at ambient pressure

Researchers from the Texas Center for Superconductivity (TcSUH) and the department of physics at the University of Houston have broken the temperature record for superconductivity at ambient pressure—a breakthrough that could eventually lead to more efficient ways to generate, transmit, and store energy.

The UH team achieved a transition temperature (Tc) of 151 Kelvin (about minus 122 degrees Celsius) under ambient pressure—the highest ever recorded for all the reported superconductors at ambient pressure since the discovery of superconductivity in 1911. The transition temperature is the point below which a material becomes superconducting, meaning electricity can flow through it without resistance.

Raising this temperature has been a major goal in superconductivity research for decades. The closer scientists can push the Tc toward room temperature, the more practical and affordable superconducting technologies could become.

Molecular chains with bite: Customized carbon nanoribbons open a cleaner path to molecular electronics

The longest chains of the conductive polymer poly(p-phenylene; PPP) produced to date are just under one micrometer (thousandth of a millimeter) long—almost an order of magnitude longer than previously possible. A research team from the fields of chemistry and physics led by Prof. Dr. Michael Gottfried from Marburg University, Germany, has demonstrated for the first time that PPP can be synthesized on surfaces via a specific ring-opening polymerization as genuine chain growth.

The statistically most frequently measured length is around 170 nanometers—with one outlier reaching nearly 1,000 nanometers—a record. The new, halogen-free process does not produce any disruptive by-products, thus opening up a particularly clean approach to ultra-long, conjugated polymer chains.

The results have been published by the interdisciplinary team from the Universities of Marburg, Giessen and Leipzig and Chinese researchers in the journal Nature Chemistry.

Scientists Solve a 70-Year Mystery Behind the Universe’s Strange Magnetic Fields

Researchers have identified a potential mechanism that explains how turbulent plasma can produce the vast, ordered magnetic fields observed across the universe Cosmic magnetic fields are everywhere, but their origin has remained one of plasma astrophysics’ most persistent mysteries. Planets, star

Beyond Rockets — Goddard Centennial

From Goddard’s first rocket to space elevators and mass drivers, we explore 100 years of rocketry—and the launch technologies that could carry humanity beyond rockets.

Get Nebula using my link for 50% off an annual subscription: https://go.nebula.tv/isaacarthur.
Watch my exclusive video Lazarus Protocols: https://nebula.tv/videos/isaacarthur–… out Day Pass: https://nebula.tv/daypass?ref=isaacar… 🚀 Join this channel to get access to perks: / @isaacarthursfia 🛒 SFIA Merchandise: https://isaac-arthur-shop.fourthwall… 🌐 Visit our Website: http://www.isaacarthur.net 🎬 Join Nebula: https://go.nebula.tv/isaacarthur ❤️ Support us on Patreon: / isaacarthur ⭐ Support us on Subscribestar: https://www.subscribestar.com/isaac-a… 👥 Facebook Group: / 1,583,992,725,237,264 📣 Reddit Community: / isaacarthur 🐦 Follow on Twitter / X: / isaac_a_arthur 💬 SFIA Discord Server: / discord Credits: Beyond Rockets — 100 Years of Rocketry and What Comes Next Written, Produced & Narrated by: Isaac Arthur Editor: Charles Slatkin Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images Chapters 0:00 Intro 1:48 The Pioneering Century 5:49 The Physics of Rockets 8:20 The Coming Revolution in Launch Systems 11:50 Beyond Rockets — The Alternative Gateways to Space 12:26 Space Elevators 13:49 Skyhooks and Rotovators 15:04 Orbital Rings 17:58 Mass Drivers and Coilguns 19:05 Nebula 20:18 Launch Loops and Dynamic Tethers 21:13 High-Altitude and Hybrid Launch Systems 22:39 Toward a Post-Rocket Civilization 23:15 The Road Ahead — Humanity’s Next Launch Century.
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