Physicists love when matter changes phases. It's understandable: Even the most mundane of phase changes — water turning solid at 0 degrees Celsius and gaseous at 100 degrees Celsius — are fascinating when you think about them.
Nature has loads of other phase changing tricks up its sleeve. They can be driven by temperature, as is the case with H20, or other parameters, such as high magnetic fields.
In an experiment published last year involving scientists from the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science, the University of Tokyo in Japan and the High Field Magnet Laboratory (HFML) in the Netherlands, scientists created a material featuring a special two-dimensional gas layer, then subjected it to both high fields and extremely low temperatures. They wanted to see what combinations of field and temperature would prompt that gas to change to a liquid and then a solid. Anytime physicists can provoke a phase transition, they learn a little more about how the world works while gaining knowledge that could one day translate into an advance in electronics, energy or other applications.
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Story Science Advisor: Uli Zeitler, Story by Kristen Coyne, and Illustrations by Caroline McNie.