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3. Quark-gluon soup
Another amazing feat of physics came out of Brookhaven's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider this year. scientists announced they'd created a "quark-gluon soup" where protons and neutrons had broken up into their constituent building blocks quarks and gluons. It took extremely powerful collisions of gold atoms in the accelerator to achieve the temperatures necessary about 7 trillion degrees Fahrenheit (4 trillion degrees Celsius). These conditions are 250,000 times hotter than the center of the sun and similar to temperatures seen just after the birth of the universe. They were the hottest temperatures ever reached on Earth.
4. Knots of light
Light may seem to travel a straight line, but sometimes it gets twisted into knots. researchers reported using a computer-controlled hologram to twist beams of laser light into pretzel shapes. The holograms, which direct the flow of light, were specially created to send light in certain directions and shapes. The researchers used a field of mathematics known as knot theory to study the resulting loops. These swirls of light, called optical vortices, could have implications for future laser devices, the physicists said.
5. Spooky entanglement
One of the strangest predictions of the theory of quantum mechanics is that particles can become "entangled" so that even after they are separated in space, when an action is performed on one particle, the other particle responds immediately. scientists announced they had measured entanglement in a new kind of system two separated pairs of vibrating particles. Previous experiments had entangled the internal properties of particles, such as spin states, but this was the first time scientists had entangled the particles' pattern of motion, which is a system that resembles the larger, everyday world.