Physicists discover the most complex forms of ice yet

Physicists discover the most complex forms of ice yet

Shalma Wegsman writes:

Ice comes in more forms than what you’ll find in a freezer or a glacier. Since 1900, scientists have observed more than 20 phases of ice, many of them shaped under extreme conditions. The growing list includes hot ice and even ice that conducts electricity.

Ice is the name for any phase of water that is solid and crystalline, meaning that it has a repeating molecular structure. Over the past decade, computer simulations have predicted tens of thousands of possible forms of ice. Though uncommon on our planet, exotic ice may exist in off-Earth environments, from cold and amorphous comet tails to the hot and crushing cores of icy planets.

As physicists put water to the test with improved experimental techniques, they keep finding surprises. “You take water, and just the way you compress it — a little bit faster, a bit slower, up and down, at the right timescale — and then you can find this completely unexpected behavior,” said Marius Millot, a research scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California.

Abandoning old assumptions and applying new techniques, scientists have discovered three new kinds of ice in the past year, including two of the most complex ice phases ever seen. “It seems a remarkable time at the moment,” said Chris Pickard, a physicist at the University of Cambridge. “They’re really finding a lot more of these structures.” [Continue reading…]

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