Now here's my favorite part...the solid diamond floated! Usually, solids are more dense the the liquid form of a substance. Water is a notable exception (ice floats because it is less dense). Turns out diamonds have the same property. It makes sense when I thought about it...the crystal structure of diamond holds the carbon atoms fairly far apart, so the density is lower. The trick is it is hard to liquify carbon and measure its properties which they finally did.
This experiment simulated the conditions deep under the cloud tops of Uranus and Neptune. The idea put forth in this paper is that there is a possibility that there is liquid carbon which diamond "icebergs" floating in it. Now that is hard to imagine...I am still trying to wrap my head around that one!
This is all very preliminary and a lot more work needs to be done. This work is a nice example of how we can study distant planets by combining computer simulations and laboratory experiments here on Earth...and I so going to use diamond as another example of a substance that has a lower density in its solid state.
Aren't you glad I didn't use the name of the "other" planet in this blog title?Reprinted with permission from the Half-Astrophysicist Blog.
5 comments:
So instead of floating me a loan, can you float me a diamond? Maybe if we get there and start mining, we can put those DeBeers crooks out of business?
Floating diamond icebergs. And I bet it rains silver and hails gold nuggets.
There is a very bad joke in there somewhere. Diamonds inside Uranus. I'd venture to guess the punch line has to do with sitting on a gold mine...
Platinum polyps? :P
I alluded to the bad jokes...I could have titled this "Uranus is a Girl's Best Friend".
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