Scientists Replicate White Dwarf Star Pressures in Lab with Microscopic Stirling Engine

Science News

Scientists Replicate White Dwarf Star Pressures in Lab with Microscopic Stirling Engine
White Dwarf StarsMicroscopic Stirling EngineThermodynamics
  • 📰 ScienceAlert
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 122 sec. here
  • 9 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 69%
  • Publisher: 68%

Researchers used a levitating silica particle and electric fields to simulate extreme temperatures found in white dwarf stars, creating a microscopic Stirling engine. This allows exploration of thermodynamics and position-dependent diffusion relevant to biological processes.

By levitating a single particle of silica in a vacuum and blasting it with synthetic temperatures higher than 10 million kelvin , physicists have created a microscopicIn a Lab on Earth, Scientists Just Replicated Pressures Found on White Dwarf Stars "This experimental platform shows great promise in its ability to simulate and explore not only high temperatures, but also the biologically relevant thermodynamic scenario of position-dependent diffusion ,""Position-dependent diffusion is key to understanding, for example, protein folding and mass transport in biological settings.

"A Stirling engine works by heating and cooling a sealed gas or fluid so that it expands and contracts in a repeating cycle, converting heat into mechanical energy. A microscopic Stirling engine is a miniature analog, based on the same principles, but operating on a micrometer scale. Message and her colleagues built their engine around a spherical particle of silica just 4.82 micrometers in diameter – a fraction of the width of a. This particle was levitated in a trap made of electric fields, where it can jiggle about a little bit, but not escape.These are effective temperatures: The electric noise applied to the system makes the silica particle jiggle about exactly as it would under temperature conditions up to 13 million K. Meanwhile, the 'cool' environment around the particle stayed about 100 times lower – a temperature contrast that would be unachievable in a real Stirling engine – allowing a probe of thermodynamics far beyond what's possible at full scale.can only be applied to averages on the microscopic scale. So while there are moments that seem to break the law, such as a large fluctuation, or efficiency seemingly in excess of 100 percent, once everything is averaged out, the system behaves like it should. The team ran their system first by applying the noise to 'heat' the particle. Then, they adjusted the electric trap to allow the particle to jiggle about more – the expansion phase of the Stirling cycle. Then, for the contraction phase, the noise was turned off, allowing the particle to 'cool' before the trap was adjusted again to reduce the jiggling. The researchers ran each experiment for between 700 and 1,400 cycles to study in detail how the system behaved. They found huge fluctuations in heat exchange, as well as brief periods where the particle seemed to produce more work than the heat it consumed, temporarily demonstrating an efficiency rate over 100 percent. This is just a result of the short-term randomness and giant fluctuations in heat and energy at small scales, and isn't unexpected. The really interesting part is that the particle didn't jiggle about randomly in the trap, as we might see in normal diffusion in a uniform environment; its movement depended on where in the trap it was. When the temperature and consistency of a medium change, that alters how particles move through it, a phenomenon known asBig breakthroughs. Bold ideas. Straight to your inbox.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

ScienceAlert /  🏆 63. in US

White Dwarf Stars Microscopic Stirling Engine Thermodynamics Particle Physics Position-Dependent Diffusion

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Jack White delivers rare words from Meg White at Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductionJack White delivers rare words from Meg White at Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductionUpon his induction to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last night, Jack White read some rare words from his ex-bandmate Meg White.
Read more »

Scientists plan to turn astronaut pee and air into edible space foodScientists plan to turn astronaut pee and air into edible space foodA new powdered protein requires only microbes available in the air we breathe and urea from astronaut urine.
Read more »

German scientists plan natural-fiber blades to tackle wind turbine wasteGerman scientists plan natural-fiber blades to tackle wind turbine wasteA German project, backed by the Schleswig-Holstein Energy and Climate Protection Agency, aims to develop small-turbine rotor blades from renewable materials.
Read more »

Scientists put quantum optics on a chip, bringing scalable quantum computers closeScientists put quantum optics on a chip, bringing scalable quantum computers closeUV photonics breakthrough could end room-sized optics in quantum computers by passing laser light through nanometer-thin on-chip waveguides.
Read more »

Scientists Say They’ve Figured Out a Way to Regrow Tooth EnamelScientists Say They’ve Figured Out a Way to Regrow Tooth EnamelI've been at Futurism since 2017, where my role has evolved to encompass design, writing, and increasingly editing.
Read more »

Scientists discover new 'lucifer' bee with devil-like horns lurking in critically endangered wildflower in AustraliaScientists discover new 'lucifer' bee with devil-like horns lurking in critically endangered wildflower in AustraliaKit Prendergast discovered the bee while surveying a critically endangered wildflower and was drawn to the insect's unique appearance.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-04-01 16:57:31