Record set for hottest temperature on Earth.

Blackleaf

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Record set for hottest temperature on Earth

Scientists produce gas more than 100 times hotter than the sun


Because of the high voltage involved, the Z machine is submerged in oil and water. This image shows lightning arcs beneath the liquid surface.

March 8, 2006

Scientists have produced superheated gas exceeding temperatures of 2 billion degrees Kelvin, or 3.6 billion degrees Fahrenheit.

This is hotter than the interior of our sun, which is about 15 million degrees Kelvin, and also hotter than any previous temperature ever achieved on Earth, they say.

They don't know how they did it.

The feat was accomplished in the Z machine at Sandia National Laboratories.

"At first, we were disbelieving," said project leader Chris Deeney. "We repeated the experiment many times to make sure we had a true result."

Thermonuclear explosions are estimated to reach only tens to hundreds of millions of degrees Kelvin; other nuclear fusion experiments have achieved temperatures of about 500 million degrees Kelvin, said a spokesperson at the lab.

The achievement was detailed in the Feb. 24 issue of the journal Physical Review Letters.

The Z machine is the largest X-ray generator in the world. It’s designed to test materials under extreme temperatures and pressures. It works by releasing 20 million amps of electricity into a vertical array of very fine tungsten wires. The wires dissolve into a cloud of charged particles, a superheated gas called plasma.

A very strong magnetic field compresses the plasma into the thickness of a pencil lead. This causes the plasma to release energy in the form of X-rays, but the X-rays are usually only several million degrees.

Sandia researchers still aren’t sure how the machine achieved the new record. Part of it is probably due to the replacement of the tungsten steel wires with slightly thicker steel wires, which allow the plasma ions to travel faster and thus achieve higher temperatures.

One thing that puzzles scientists is that the high temperature was achieved after the plasma’s ions should have been losing energy and cooling. Also, when the high temperature was achieved, the Z machine was releasing more energy than was originally put in, something that usually occurs only in nuclear reactions.

Sandia consultant Malcolm Haines theorizes that some unknown energy source is involved, which is providing the machine with an extra jolt of energy just as the plasma ions are beginning to slow down.

Sandia National Laboratories is located by Albuquerque New Mexico and is part of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).

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Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
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Interesting stuff. One wonders what could be accomplished in doing this but then they find out the highest temperatures are when it's losing energy and cooling off. Figuring that out will keep them busy for a while.
 

Blackleaf

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I read somewhere that if you heated even a pinhead to the temperature of the centre of the Sun (15 million degrees Kelvin) everything for miles around - trees, plants, buildings, people - would set ablaze.

But these scientists managed to create a temperature of 3.6 BILLION Kelvin, so it was lucky the experiment didn't go wrong and the whole of North America was set alight.
 

#juan

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Aug 30, 2005
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Temperature conversion

http://www.chemie.fu-berlin.de/chemistry/general/units_en.html#temp

A little bit of the science

http://mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/60409.html



But these scientists managed to create a temperature of 3.6 BILLION Kelvin, so it was lucky the experiment didn't go wrong and the whole of North America was set alight.

There is the small matter of specific heat and the energy required to set North America alight. What I'm saying is that there was never any danger because these "scientists" did not have an energy source sufficient to accomplish the setting alight of the whole of North America. I have the distinct feeling that this was strictly a theoretical achievement.