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Quest to understand ‘nothing’ wins Physics World’s 2015 Book of the Year

Trespassing on Einstein's Lawn by Amanda Gefter

What sparked your interest in physics? It’s a question that appears regularly in Physics World‘s “Once a physicist” column (which profiles people who studied physics and then went on to do something else), and common responses include “I was good at it in school” and “I had an inspiring teacher”. But for the science journalist Amanda Gefter, the answer is much less conventional. As she explains in her book, Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn – which Physics World has chosen as its Book of the Year for 2015 – her interest in physics began “in a Chinese restaurant, circa 1995, when my father asked me a question about nothing”.

At the time, Gefter was an angsty teenager who found her high-school science classes boring, yet her father’s question struck a chord. Soon the pair were devouring popular-physics books, and a few years later, they blagged their way into a physics conference. Eventually, Gefter became a science journalist as a “cover” so that she could continue asking questions about what is “real” in the universe we observe around us.

Gefter’s background is an important part of Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn, which mixes her coming-of-age story with a penetrating (and frequently mind-blowing) analysis of what modern physics has to say about the nature of reality. In the book, Gefter grows from someone with little knowledge of physics, into the sort of person who asks questions like “How can we apply the holographic principle to our de Sitter universe?”, and she takes readers with her, sharing and explaining the answers that theorists such as Alan Guth, Fotini Markopoulou, Kip Thorne and Leonard Susskind have given her over the years. Hence, Gefter’s private quest for understanding becomes a way of introducing general readers to some of the most esoteric concepts in physics and cosmology.

This combination of the personal and the scientific is highly unusual in popular-physics writing, and it helped propel Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn to the top of a strong shortlist for Physics World‘s annual books award, which recognizes works that are “novel” as well as “interesting to physicists” and (of course) “well written”. That said, the other nine books on the 2015 shortlist also have these qualities in abundance, and you can find out more about a few of them if you listen to our latest podcast.

In the podcast, you’ll hear Physics World‘s editor Matin Durrani and reviews editor Margaret Harris discussing their favourite shortlisted books with Andrew Glester, the science communicator behind the Cosmic Shed podcast. You’ll also hear Amanda Gefter describe the pros and cons of explaining highly mathematical concepts without resorting to equations – something she discusses at greater length in a previous edition of the Physics World podcast.

This is the seventh year that the magazine has picked a Book of the Year. Previous winners include The Strangest Man, Graham Farmelo’s biography of Paul Dirac (2009); How the Hippies Saved Physics, David Kaiser’s analysis of how relative outsiders helped revive interest in the fundamentals of quantum mechanics (2012); and Stuff Matters, Mark Miodownik’s paean to the science of everyday materials (2014).

Book of the Year 2015

Each year, Physics World reviews a shedload of great physics books, and in 2015 we’re taking that turn of phrase literally, teaming up with The Cosmic Shed podcast to record our “Book of the Year” announcement in – yes – a garden shed.

In this podcast, you will hear Physics World‘s editor Matin Durrani and reviews editor Margaret Harris being quizzed on some of their favourite shortlisted books by The Cosmic Shed‘s Andrew Glester, a Bristol-based science communicator who loves to debate “science fiction, science fact and everything in between” from the comfort of his garden shed. For the most part, this podcast sticks with science fact, but with several of 2015’s shortlisted books having decidedly cosmic overtones, you never know where the discussion might lead….

We hope you enjoy hearing about these books as much as we enjoyed reading and talking about them. Congratulations to all the shortlisted authors!

Shortlist for Physics World‘s Book of the Year 2015 (alphabetical by author)

Life on the Edge: the Coming of Age of Quantum Biology Jim Al-Khalili and Johnjoe McFadden

Physics on Your Feet: Ninety Minutes of Shame but a PhD for the Rest of Your Life Dmitry Budker and Alexander Sushkov

Half-Life: the Divided Life of Bruno Pontecorvo, Physicist or Spy Frank Close

Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn: a Father, a Daughter, the Meaning of Nothing and the Beginning of Everything Amanda Gefter

Beyond: Our Future in Space Chris Impey

The Water Book: the Extraordinary Story of Our Most Ordinary Substance Alok Jha

Monsters: the Hindenburg Disaster and the Birth of Pathological Technology Ed Regis

Tunnel Visions: the Rise and Fall of the Superconducting Super Collider Michael Riordan, Lillian Hoddeson, Adrienne Kolb

The Copernicus Complex: the Quest for our Cosmic (In)Significance Caleb Scharf

Atoms Under the Floorboards: the Surprising Science Hidden in Your Home Chris Woodford

Are reticent climate researchers 'failing humanity'?

AGU Fall 2015

By James Dacey in San Francisco

Droves of delegates poured into the Moscone Center in San Francisco today for day one of AGU Fall 2015 – the largest Earth and space-science meeting in the world, with a whopping 24,000 delegates expected over the week. Having arrived from the UK on Saturday night, the jet-lag has kicked in with a vengeance today, so a couple of the conference coffees were definitely in order this morning. I’m just taking a break now after an interesting session about communicating climate change, and whether those researchers who don’t engage in the public debate are “failing humanity”.

The room was packed to the rafters, no doubt down to the profile of the speakers. First up was James Hansen, the former NASA scientist who has been outspoken in his criticism of the recent COP21 climate discussions, or at least the lack of concrete proposals to cut carbon emissions. Hansen restated his beef with the deal and argued that the only workable solution is for authorities to collect a carbon fee at source, such as charging domestic mines for the weight of carbon they sell. This, he believes, is the most effective way to make renewable energy and low-carbon options more viable. Not one to pull his punches, Hansen described US Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz’s idea that China will be able to curb much of its carbon missions using carbon capture and storage (CSS) technologies as “pure unadulterated bullshit”.

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Our favourite pictures of 2015


New Horizons uncovers Pluto’s icy secrets

It will come as no surprise that our top image(s) come from NASA’s New Horizons flyby of the dwarf-planet Pluto, which took place on 14 July this year. At its closest approach, the craft was a mere 12,472 km from the planet’s surface – roughly the same distance from New York to Mumbai, India – making it the first-ever space mission to explore a world so far from Earth. Since then, New Horizons has released many stunning, close-up views of the previously unseen dwarf planet, revealing that it is a chilly world where glaciers of frozen nitrogen, methane and carbon dioxide flow around sturdy hills made of water ice. The images revealed that Pluto has mountains several kilometres high, escarpments that run for 600 km and a “bedrock” made of frozen water. Instead of picking just one image, above is a composite film that consists of some of the best views of this distant world. They were made with the telescopic Long Range Reconnaissance Imager, which took pictures every three seconds.

Lasers reveal previously unseen fossil details

You could be forgiven for thinking that the photograph above is of some astronomical wonder such as a nebula, but you would be wrong. Above is a fossil of the skull of a Microraptor, imaged using a new laser-based scanning technique, which could potentially help researchers to get new information from fossil specimens. Developed by palaeontologist Tom Kaye of the Burke Museum in Seattle, together with colleagues also in the US, this inexpensive and non-destructive approach uses commercial-grade lasers to stimulate fluorescence in the fossil. This reveals detail that would not have been observable with traditional visual enhancers such as ultraviolet light, which have a far lower irradiance level. Laser scanning can also help to identify composite fakes – fossils that have been cobbled together from different specimens – by revealing differences in fossil mineralogy.

Clap your eyes on the first ‘images’ of thunder

The cool blue arcs of colour that you see above are among the first images of thunder that have been taken by an international team of researchers. Created by visualizing the sound waves produced by artificially triggered lightning, the novel experiment was carried out by Maher Dayeh of the Southwest Research Institute together with colleagues in Australia and the US. They designed a large array of 16 microphones, lined up 95 m from the launch pad where the lightning would hit. Following each strike, the recordings were processed and converted to give a vertical “acoustic profile” of the lightning bolt. With sound waves from higher up taking longer to reach the receivers, each return-stroke signal has a characteristic curved appearance. The team compared long-exposure optical photographs of triggered lightning events (top) with acoustically imaged profiles of the discharge channel (below), corrected for sound-speed propagation and atmospheric-absorption effects.

Could lasers guide and control the path of lightning?

Following on from imaging thunder, many scientists – mad or otherwise – have sought to control lightning. Thanks to the latest work done by an international team of researchers, electrical discharges could be controlled and guided with lasers, along complex paths and even around obstacles. Our ability to control the exact path such currents take is limited because they are affected by everything from air temperature to the presence of pre-ionized matter. Recent developments in optical physics have brought to light new types of “non-diffracting” laser beams with unusual properties. Both Airy and Bessel beam lasers can “self-heal”, which means that if their intensity peaks are blocked by an obstacle, they can reconstruct themselves on the other side of it. Matteo Clerici, a physicist at INRS University in Canada and Heriot-Watt University in the UK, and colleagues fired different laser beams between two wire electrodes, placed 5 cm apart, between which a high voltage (of 15 kV) was then applied. The images above show how the discharges jump over an obstacle and how the Bessel (top) and Airy (bottom) beams restore themselves, leaving the electric discharge to continue along an almost unaffected trajectory.

Gravitational lensing creates ‘Einstein’s cross’ of distant supernova

A distant galaxy has created four images of a supernova even further away, via gravitational lensing, that have been captured for the first time by an international team of astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The “Einstein cross” pattern forms as light from the distant supernova is lensed as it passes a galaxy that sits within a cluster of galaxies, on its way to Earth. In the image above, the many red galaxies are members of the massive MACS J1149.6+2223 cluster, which creates distorted and highly magnified images of the galaxies behind it. A large galaxy (centre of the box) has split the light from a supernova in a magnified background galaxy into four yellow images (arrows) to form the cross. Patrick Kelly from the University of California, Berkeley, together with colleagues across the globe, already knows that a fifth image will appear in the next decade, providing a “replay” of the supernova, because light can take various paths around and through a gravitational lens and therefore arrive at Earth at different times. This is particularly rare and useful, because astronomy is not normally a predictive science.

Revealing the secret strength of a sea sponge

Found in deep waters in the western Pacific Ocean, the 20–35 cm-long delicate-looking sea sponge (right) Euplectella aspergillum – also known as Venus’s flower basket – has a hidden strength. Its skeleton is firmly attached to the sea floor by thousands of glassy silica “spicules”, which, despite being no thicker than a human hair, have a remarkable load capacity. The spicules are covered in backward-facing barbs that can transmit significant forces along their length to the rest of the sponge’s structure. Each spicule is about 10 cm long and comprises a silica core surrounded by 10–50 concentric silica cylinders, each separated by a thin layer of organic material. Mechanical engineer Haneesh Kesari and colleagues at Brown University and Harvard University in the US have now unravelled the clever design of the sponge by developing a mathematical model of the internal structure of a spicule. A scanning electron micrograph of a spicule (left) shows concentric rings of silica that become thinner towards the outside of the structure (the scale bar is 10 µm long).

Satellite sensor unexpectedly detects waves in upper atmosphere

On 27 April 2014, photographer Jeff Dai was shooting the night sky over the Himalayas, near the border of Tibet, China and India, at an elevation of 4700 m above sea level. After examining his long-exposure images, he was surprised to see large concentric ripples in the glowing air – invisible to the naked eye – that it turns out were formed by a massive thunderstorm that raged over nearby Bangladesh. Coincidentally, the US Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership environmental satellite was looking down at the same spot at the same time and, rather unexpectedly, its on-board “Day/Night Band” (DNB) sensor also imaged the ripples, which are disturbances in the upper atmosphere’s nightglow caused by atmospheric “gravity waves”. Such waves drive winds and alter the local temperature and composition in the middle and upper atmosphere. Their observations revealed a complex array of gravity waves in the upper atmosphere that have never before been observed globally at this spatial detail.

Balloon bursts approach the speed of sound

French artist Jacques Honvault is famous for his high-speed photographic images, including the spectacular shot above of a balloon fragmenting just after it is popped. Now, physicists Sébastien Moulinet and Mokhtar Adda-Bedia of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris, have discovered that there is a critical point in the inflation of a balloon beyond which it will create such beautiful flower-like patterns when it bursts. The duo filmed the rupturing process of a latex balloon at 60,000 frames per second using a high-speed camera. In some of their experimental runs, the balloons were filled to a relatively low internal air pressure and then pierced with a scalpel. In these cases, the slit cleanly expanded as the balloon burst. However, when inflated to the pressure at which the balloons would burst spontaneously, the initial slit would suddenly bifurcate to create a “Y” shape. These cracks would further split until the balloon was shredded. The researchers looked at latex balloons of four different thicknesses, inflated to varying degrees. They found that when the stress in the material is above a critical value of about 1.8 MPa, the balloon will fragment. Below it, the rupture is a single slit. The physicists believe that the critical value corresponds to the crack moving at its maximum speed of about 570 m/s – the speed of sound in the latex membranes.

Imaging the polarity of individual chemical bonds

A new imaging method – based on atomic force microscopy (AFM) – allows users to precisely detect and map the charge distribution within molecules has been developed by researchers in Europe. The technique has been used to reveal the difference in bond polarity between two structurally identical but chemically distinct molecules. Jascha Repp of the University of Regensberg in Germany and colleagues were keen to improve images taken in a variation of AFM – dubbed kelvin probe force spectroscopy (KPFS) – that are often distorted. To demonstrate their technique, the researchers looked at the structurally identical molecules F12C18Hg3 (left) and H12C18Hg3 (right) pictured above. They showed for the first time that the C–H bonds in the first compound were polarized with the negative charge on the carbon atom, whereas the C–F bonds in the second were polarized the opposite way.

Organic microflowers bloom bright

The image above may look exactly like a fire-red carnation, but what you are looking at is a digitally coloured artificial microflower, magnified nearly 20,000 times. Developed by researchers at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia, together with colleagues in India, these artificial organic flowers self-assemble in water, blooming just like an actual flower. The team has developed, for the first time, floral microstructures that form via a self-repeating arrangement in water. The artificial microflowers, which take about three hours to fully develop, are created by mixing two organic components (naphthalenediimide-bearing phosphonic acid and melamine) in water, which is then evaporated. Such floral structures could be used in a variety of fields – from optoelectronics and chemosensors to nanotechnology, biotechnology, biomedicine and organic electronics – thanks to their distinctive surfaces.

Designing smarter cities

By James Dacey in Berkeley, US

This weekend politicians at the COP21 summit in Paris signed a landmark legal agreement to keep global temperature rises at bay by curbing carbon emissions. The tricky next question of course is: how are we actually going to do this? In this short video, civil engineer Arpad Horvath of the University of California Berkeley explains that one of the aspects will be a fundamental rethink of our urban infrastructures. Horvath believes we need to move towards “smart cities” with smaller carbon footprints at all levels – from greener individual buildings, to more sustainable transport networks.

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Commercial quantum computer works, sort of

By Hamish Johnston

This morning I was speaking to quantum-entanglement expert Jian-Wei Pan, who shares the Physics World Breakthrough of the Year 2015 award for his work on quantum teleportation. Pan briefly mentioned research reported earlier this week by John Martinis, Hartmut Neven and colleagues at Google Research whereby a D-Wave 2X quantum computer was used to perform a computational task 100 million times faster than a classical algorithm.

This is a remarkable result, but does it mean that D-Wave’s controversial processors actually work as quantum computers? Some quantum-computing experts are urging caution in how the research is interpreted.

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Double quantum-teleportation milestone is Physics World 2015 Breakthrough of the Year

Synonymous with the fictional world of Star Trek, the idea of teleportation has intrigued scientists and the public alike. Reality caught up with fiction in 1993, when an international group of physicists proved theoretically that the teleportation of a quantum state is entirely possible, so long as the original state being copied is destroyed. Successfully teleporting a quantum state therefore involves making a precise measurement of a system, transmitting the information to a distant location and then reconstructing a flawless copy of the original state. As the “no cloning” theorem of quantum mechanics does not allow for a perfect copy of a quantum state to be made, it must be completely transferred from one particle onto another, such that the first particle is no longer in that state.

Complete and perfect

In other words, a complete and perfect transfer is completed when the first particle loses all of the properties that are teleported to the other. The first experimental teleportation of the spin of a photon was achieved in 1997, and since then, everything from individual states of atomic spins, coherent light fields and other entities have been transferred. But all of these experiments were limited to teleporting a single property, and scaling that up to even two properties has proved a herculean feat.

Pan and Lu’s team has now simultaneously transferred a photon’s spin (polarization) and its orbital angular momentum (OAM) to another photon some distance away. Teleportation experiments usually require a “quantum channel” via which the transfer actually takes place. This channel is normally an extra set of “entangled” photons with quantum states that are inextricably linked so that any change made to one instantly influences the other. In this experiment, this is a “hyper-entangled” set, where the two particles are simultaneously entangled in both their spin and their OAM (see “Two quantum properties teleported together for first time”).

Although it is possible to extend Pan’s method to teleport more than two properties simultaneously, this becomes increasingly difficult with each added property – the likely limit is three. To do this would require the ability to experimentally control 10 photons, while the current record is eight. The team is currently working hard to change that though, and Pan says that they “hope to reach 10-photon entanglement in a few months”. An alternate method that is also being developed could allow the team to double that figure to 20 within three years. “We should be able to teleport three degrees of freedom of a single photon or multiple photons soon,” he adds.

The ability to teleport multiple states simultaneously is essential to fully describe a quantum particle, and is a tentative step towards teleporting anything larger than a quantum particle. Pan adds that “quantum teleportation has been recognized as a key element in the ongoing development of long-distance quantum communications that provide unbreakable security, ultrafast quantum computers and quantum networks”.

• Watch our Google+ Hangout, where physicsworld.com editor Hamish Johnston talks with Pan and Lu about all things quantum

The top 10 were chosen by a panel of six Physics World editors and reporters, and the criteria for judging the top-10 breakthroughs included

  • fundamental importance of research;
  • significant advance in knowledge;
  • strong connection between theory and experiment; and
  • general interest to all physicists.

Now for our nine runner-up breakthroughs, which are listed below in no particular order.

Cyclotron radiation from a single electron is measured for the first time

To the Project 8 collaboration, for measuring the cyclotron radiation from individual electrons emitted during the beta decay of krypton-83. This radiation is emitted as the electron passes through a magnetic field, and allows the team to make a very precise measurement of the energy at which the particle is emitted. Project 8 is now working hard to improve the precision of the measurement so it can be used to calculate one of the most elusive quantities in physics – the mass of the electron antineutrino that is also given off during the beta decay.

Weyl fermions are spotted at long last

To Zahid Hasan of Princeton University, Marin Soljačić of MIT, and Zhong Fang and Hongming Weng of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, for their pioneering work on Weyl fermions. These massless particles were predicted by the German mathematician Hermann Weyl in 1929. Working independently, a team led by Hasan, and another led by Fang and Weng, spotted telltale evidence for quasiparticles that behave as Weyl fermions in the semimetal tantalum arsenide. Soljačić and colleagues have spotted evidence for Weyl fermions in a very different material – a “double-gyroid” photonic crystal. The massless nature of Weyl fermions means that they could be used in high-speed electronics; and because they are topologically protected from scattering, they could be useful in quantum computers.

Physicists claim ‘loophole-free’ Bell-violation experiment

To Bas Hensen, Ronald Hanson and colleagues of the Delft University of Technology, for making a measurement of Bell’s inequality that is simultaneously free from both the locality and detection loopholes. Their experiment involved entangling spins in diamonds separated by 1.28 km and then measuring correlations between the spins. The large separation between the diamonds and the relative ease with which the spins can be measured ensured that the experiment is loop-hole free – and its result confirmed the existence of the seemingly bizarre concept of quantum-mechanical entanglement.

First visible light detected directly from an exoplanet

To Jorge Martins of the Institute of Astrophysics and Space Sciences and the University of Porto and colleagues in Portugal, France, Switzerland and Chile, for being the first to measure a high-resolution optical spectral signature of light reflected from an exoplanet. The team used the High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher instrument at the European Southern Observatory’s La Silla Observatory to study light from 51 Pegasi b – which was first spotted in 1995. Using a new technique that they developed, Martins and colleagues were able to measure the planet’s mass, orbital inclination and reflectivity, which can be used to infer the composition of both the planet’s surface and atmosphere.

LHCb claims discovery of two pentaquarks

To the LHCb collaboration at CERN, for showing that five quarks can be bound together in particles called pentaquarks. First predicted in the 1970s and the subject of controversy in the 2000s, the existence of pentaquarks was resolved this year when two pentaquarks with masses around 4400 MeV/c2 emerged from proton collisions at the LHC. Both signals had statistical significances greater than 9σ – much higher than 5σ, which is the golden standard for a discovery in particle physics.

Hydrogen sulphide is warmest ever superconductor at 203 K

To Mikhail Eremets and colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and the Johannes Gutenberg University – both in Mainz, Germany – for discovering the first material that is a superconductor at a temperature that can occur naturally on the surface of the Earth. The team found that hydrogen sulphide under an extreme pressure of 1.5 million atmospheres is a superconductor up to a temperature of 203 K, which is 19 K warmer than the coldest temperature ever recorded in Antarctica. While further research is needed to understand why superconductivity arises in this material, the discovery could pave the way to the holy grail of superconductors: a material that superconducts at room temperature.

Portable ‘battlefield MRI’ comes out of the lab

To Michelle Espy and colleagues at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in the US, for creating a practical, portable ultralow-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system. Unlike conventional MRI systems that use superconducting coils to create very high magnetic fields, the new system relies on much-weaker fields that are much easier to create in remote locations. This, however, means that the system must be capable of detecting much-weaker signals, which it does using superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs). With its low power requirements and lightweight construction, the team hopes that its prototype design can soon be deployed for use in medical centres in developing countries, as well as in military field hospitals.

Fermionic microscope sees first light

To Lawrence Cheuk, Martin Zwierlein and colleagues at MIT, for building the first “fermionic microscope” – a device that is capable of imaging up to 1000 individual atoms in an ultracold gas. Great strides have been made in understanding how electrons interact with each other in materials. This has been done by cooling fermionic atoms to ultracold temperatures, and then using light and magnetic fields to fine-tune the interactions between the atoms. The fermionic microscope takes this approach one important step further by allowing physicists to observe the behaviour of individual fermions as the gas cools. The new technique could soon be used by researchers to observe magnetic interactions between atoms, and could even be used to detect quantum entanglement within the ensemble.

Silicon quantum logic gate is a first

To Andrew Dzurak, Menno Veldhorst and colleagues at the University of New South Wales in Australia and Keio University in Japan, for creating the first quantum-logic device made from silicon. Their controlled-not (CNOT) gate is a fundamental component of a quantum computer and was made using conventional semiconductor manufacturing processes. The device uses electron spin to store quantum information, and the researchers now plan to scale up the technology to create a full-scale quantum-computer chip.

Akatsuki space mission reaches Venus after five-year detour

Japan’s Akatsuki spacecraft has finally entered orbit around Venus after taking a five-year detour through the solar system. Launched in May 2010 by the Japanese Space Agency (JAXA), Akatsuki failed in its first attempt at entering orbit around Venus and has spent the last five years circling the Sun. Now that the mission is back on track, Akatsuki will study the planet’s violent atmosphere and could confirm if there are active volcanoes on its surface.

After making the seven-month journey to Venus in 2010, Akatsuki began firing its thrusters to put it in orbit around the planet. Instead of firing for more than 9 min as required, the thrusters shut down after 2–3 min and the spacecraft put itself into a “safe mode”. By the time JAXA engineers had worked out what had happened, it was too late to complete the manoeuvre.

Second time lucky

A second chance came three days ago, when Akatsuki approached Venus again and the thrusters were fired for 20 min. JAXA has now confirmed that the probe is in a stable orbit that will take it as close as 400 km to the surface of Venus. Regular operation of the probe’s scientific instruments is scheduled to start in April 2016.

Akatsuki means “dawn” in Japanese, and the 500 kg probe cost around $220m to build and launch in 2010. Akatsuki is expected to gather data for two years using its five on-board cameras. Two of these instruments operate in the near-infrared regime and will study the planet’s surface and the motion of clouds, as well as the size of particles that make up the clouds. A long-wave infrared camera, meanwhile, will measure the temperature at the “cloud top”, which lies around 65 km above the planet’s surface.

Lightning and airglow

The final two cameras are an ultraviolet imager to measure sulphur dioxide at the cloud top, and a lightning and airglow camera, which will capture lightning flashes that have never been observed on the planet before.

Often called Earth’s “sister planet” thanks to its similar mass and size, Venus orbits closer to the Earth than any other planet in our solar system. However, Venus’s climate is very different from that of Earth. Its atmosphere contains mostly carbon dioxide and is a sultry 460 °C, with the high temperatures believed to be caused by a “runaway greenhouse effect”. And while Venus rotates at around 6.5 km per hour, its atmosphere rotates at a violent 360 km per hour. Akatsuki should soon boost our understanding of what lies within Venus’s blankets of cloud.

Flat-pack physics: where art meets science in the third dimension

We’ve all admired the delicate butterflies, cranes and flowers created by those who have mastered the art of paper-folding. But far from being a decorative curiosity, origami techniques are increasingly being used to solve real-world problems in physics and beyond. From solar panels and telescope lenses to designer materials and nanoscale machines, the ability to create 3D objects from 2D materials has energized physicists and created a new realm of interdisciplinary research.

The term “origami” comes from the Japanese words “ori”, meaning folding, and “kami”, meaning paper. However, the art of folding paper to create sculptures and shapes arose independently over the course of the last millennium in Europe, China and Japan. In Eastern cultures, origami representations played a symbolic role in wedding and funeral ceremonies, while in the West they were more a dinner-time novelty for the social elite. In the 1950s, though, the work of a new generation of origami artists inspired a renaissance of the craft, which became an art form in its own right.

The aim of origami is to turn a flat piece of paper into a 3D sculpture or model by folding it in different ways. The most common origami techniques are the “valley” fold, where the paper is folded upwards into a 3D “V” shape with a crease at the bottom, and the “mountain” fold, where the crease is at the top and the paper is folded downwards in a 3D “Λ” shape. Most other techniques in origami are a variation on – or combinations of – these two folds.

Almost any flat material can be used for origami, provided it holds a crease. Origami artists generally use specialist paper for their creations, but materials such as cloth, money, leather, metal, leaves, pasta and even tortillas can also be used. One thing that origami purists frown on is anything that involves cutting the paper or other material used in their creations. However, a variation of the craft has arisen in which folding and cutting are combined to produce delicate – and usually symmetrical – sculptures, patterns and shapes. This is known as kirigami, from the Japanese “kiru” meaning to cut. What both origami and kirigami forbid, however, is any sticking or taping of the materials used. Structure and stability are provided solely by the folding and cutting of the material by the artist.

More than just paper cranes

Origami’s ever-growing role in science lies in the fact that both it and kirigami can create 3D structures from a flat, 2D material, giving researchers ways of packing large sheets of material into small spaces. One of the most common techniques for achieving this is the “Miura-ori” pattern (see box below), which combines valley and mountain folds to allow a flat sheet to be folded into a much smaller volume using just a compressional force in the plane of the sheet – and likewise for the compressed sheet to be unfolded with minimal force. This approach was used, for example, in 1995 to unfold a solar panel on a Japanese satellite called the Space Flyer Unit.

Engineers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the US, working with American physicist and origami master Robert Lang, used a more complex folding pattern to develop a prototype 5 m-diameter space-telescope lens that could be folded into a cylinder for launch and then unfolded once in orbit. (Sadly, the 100 m version was never built.) And engineers Zhong You and Kaori Kuribayashi from the University of Oxford, UK, used an origami fold pattern called the “waterbomb” to develop a medical stent that can be inserted in folded form into a clogged artery and then deployed to open up the blood vessel and restore blood flow.

The principles of origami mean that when paper or any other suitable material is folded, its mechanical properties are determined by the specific pattern of the folds. Physicists can therefore use origami fold patterns to design materials with the properties that they need. And it is in this area of “designer mechanics” that the really exciting developments are happening.

The Miura-ori pattern

A guide for folding a paper sheet using red, blue and black lines and a photo of the resulting paper shape

The “Miura-ori” pattern – developed by astrophysicist Koryo Miura, after whom it is named – combines valley and mountain folds to allow a flat sheet to be folded into a much smaller area. One unusual physical property it gives a material is that if you pull on opposite ends, the material becomes wider in a perpendicular direction, while if you compress them, the material becomes more narrow.

Initially designed for use with solar panels on spacecraft, Miura-ori is also gaining popularity as a way of folding maps. This is because the folding pattern, using parallelograms instead of the usual squares or rectangles, places less stress on the folds and makes them less likely to tear or wear out.

In a paper last year in Science (345 647), a team led by physicist Jesse Silverberg at Cornell University explored the Miura-ori tessellation as a metamaterial design. The group found, for example, that the compressive modulus of the structure can be tuned by adding a “pop-through defect”, which can be achieved on the paper version by pushing one of the vertices so that it pops out in the other direction. Such “lattice defects” can be used to create analogues of crystallographic structures such as vacancies, dislocations and grain boundaries.

To see the effect for yourself, cut out the template above along the black line, crease all the solid red lines so they form “mountain folds” that point up off the page, crease all the dashed blue lines so they form “valley folds” that point down into the page. You should be able to collapse all the creases in one simple movement so that it folds flat, or squeeze it from the sides to collapse it into a much smaller area.

A focus on folding

So what’s caused the recent surge of interest in origami in physics and engineering? There are three main reasons, says Itai Cohen, a complex-matter physicist at Cornell University in the US. First, we’re learning more about how origami works. “The mathematics of origami have recently undergone a revolution,” he says. This means that we now know more about how to make the fold patterns we want. Second, the development of laser cutters and 3D printing makes it easier to generate these patterns. And third, improved polymer fabrication methods mean that we can create microscale polymers with
responsive properties.

Two photos: origami robots in three positions; flexible solar cells

Another reason for the increased focus on origami by physicists is that origami is scale-invariant. In other words, because the principles of origami are geometrical in nature they can be applied at the largest or smallest scales imaginable – and the geometry will still work. This property is of particular interest for physicists working at the smaller end of the size spectrum. “We can make shapes with almost atomistic resolution,” says biophysicist Ulrich Keyser at the University of Cambridge, UK, who uses origami techniques to create DNA structures. “It’s a huge advantage.”

This approach is not without its challenges, mainly because folding paper is not as simple as you might think. Origami is complicated and researchers often use simplifying assumptions, such as perfect hinges and rigid facets, that do not hold in reality. “The basic theory is a good first step,” says Cohen, “but you need to do all this extra stuff to figure out what is going on in the experiment.”

Another difficulty, says Paul McEuen, a nanoscale physicist at Cornell, is that we do not yet have a thorough understanding of how origami systems will behave when pulled or compressed. For this, we need both a better understanding of origami behaviour and improved design tools. And even when we do know how particular fold patterns work, it is not always straightforward to create them because some materials are harder to work with than others.

Materials need a high degree of homogeneity if they are to be useful for origami or kirigami, otherwise, it can be difficult to predict how they will behave

A general rule of thumb is that origami techniques work well on materials that are thin, but not so thin that they are invisible to the naked eye. Thicker sheets tend to buckle or deform when folded, while materials behave entirely differently on the nanoscale. “A graphene sheet is difficult to crease,” McEuen adds. “It just pops back into shape.” Furthermore, says chemical engineer Nick Kotov at the University of Michigan in the US, materials need a high degree of homogeneity if they are to be useful for origami or kirigami. Otherwise, it can be difficult to predict how they will behave when folded or compressed.

Research priorities

For such a relatively new discipline, current research into origami and kirigami techniques is broad. For some scientists, the focus is on understanding more about how such techniques work with different materials: Christian Santangelo, a condensed-matter physicist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst in the US, for example, is exploring the relationship between the geometry of materials and their mechanical properties. Others, such as Cohen, are trying to understand the basic design principles to tune the mechanical properties of real-world (as opposed to ideal) materials, in which, for example, a fold causes a slight deformation and uses up a tiny bit of the material. And You, who brought us the origami stent, is currently developing approaches to folding thicker materials.

Researchers are also using origami and kirigami to build things. “We’re extending origami to the very small scale,” says Cohen. “We’re trying to fold graphene, to realize the 2D-to-3D paradigm in the thinnest materials that are available – or will ever be available, really.” In doing so, Cohen hopes to be able to create tiny devices that can measure key information about their environment and report back the results. McEuen, meanwhile, is seeking to build and activate ever more complex structures including the world’s “softest” electronics, which could be stretched across a cell to record when neurons fire.

Two photos of curved 3D structures created by folding a 2D material

As for Kotov, he wants to overcome the lack of homogeneity in materials used for origami and kirigami by using layer-by-layer assembly to produce composite structures based on graphene and carbon nanotubes. Kotov is especially interested in materials requiring a combination of properties, such as conductivity and “stretchability”. While there is usually a trade-off between the two, Kotov has already succeeded in making electrically conductive composite sheets more elastic – increasing their strain from 4% to 370% without affecting their conductivity.

And it’s not just graphene. Keyser has used origami techniques to create self-assembly DNA structures and is now exploring the physics of membrane transport and the role that new membrane proteins could play in shaping biological membranes at the nanoscale. His longer-term aim, though, is to use origami to build DNA-based protein replacements. If successful, this “nanomedicine” could provide a valuable new weapon to help combat genetic diseases.

A bright future

It appears that origami and kirigami techniques can be applied to many different areas of research. But is this just an interesting novelty or the start of something more profound? Cohen is cautious. “It depends,” he says, “on whether we can move beyond the exploratory phase to identifying a particular problem that is worthy of solution.” Santangelo is more confident, explaining that “people are going to start making real things using origami”. But McEuen is outright optimistic. “I think you’ll see it emerge as a major paradigm for how to build complex structures,” he says. “It will be the standard way of building stuff.”

For Kotov, the future of origami and kirigami will be about how small we can make the folds and cuts, potentially taking us from microscale to nanoscale fabrication, which could lead to a new generation of materials for electronics. “Stretchable electronics is clearly one of the strong fields of application for kirigami composites,” he says. “The trends for electronics are for them to be conformable, biomimetic and human friendly. But the materials are the bottleneck here.” Kotov also expects new developments in optics, once origami and kirigami get down to the scale of the wavelength of visible light.

Further developments are likely to come from the way in which origami and kirigami are not only bringing together researchers from different fields but artists, architects and designers, too. Santangelo agrees. “It’s much more interdisciplinary than anything else I’ve done,” he says.

And although we should not overlook origami’s aesthetic appeal, its fun and its beauty, the application of origami and kirigami to modern problems is a serious endeavour. It is one that could change forever how we build things in physics.

Portrait of a black hole

We live in the age of photography. The huge popularity of Instagram, Snapchat and the “selfie” suggests that the old idiom of a picture being worth a thousand words has never rung more true. It is no surprise then that this mania for photography has hit a team of tenacious astronomers, who want to capture something infinitely more exotic than the stars, galaxies and nebulae that the Hubble Space Telescope and its many successors regularly image.

The subject of these astronomers’ fancy though, is an elusive muse. Hidden behind colossal veils of gas and dust, some 26,000 light-years away, the tiny spot of their fascination is one of the most difficult things to image in the universe – a black hole. More specifically, they want to capture the four-million solar mass supermassive black hole that lies at the heart of our Milky Way galaxy, dubbed Sagittarius A* (SgrA*).

It sounds an impossible feat – after all, as its name suggests, a black hole is a point in space from which nothing, not even light, can escape. But that problem is not about to stop the researchers involved in the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), who are determined to image SgrA* within the next few years.

Bright horizons

Supermassive black holes are thought to lie at the centres of most galaxies in the universe, and astronomers are keen to decipher their key properties – such as how these behemoths “eat”, how their extreme gravity affects the space–time around them, and how some of them fuel the massive jets of material that spew out from the galaxies that host them.

A black hole’s “event horizon” is the boundary at which even light cannot escape its gravitational pull, as the velocity required to do so would be greater than the speed of light – something forbidden by Einstein’s general theory of relativity. The theory – which celebrates it centenary this year – introduced the radical notion that space–time is dynamic and affected by matter. General relativity can be verified either on some of the largest scale structures in the universe – such as a galaxy supercluster – or in places where the effects of gravity are extreme. While the theory has passed many tests, the EHT researchers want to see just how well it holds up at the “ultimate proving ground” – a black hole’s edge.

The impact of a supermassive black hole is felt across an entire galaxy, spread out over hundreds of thousands of light-years. But according to Sheperd Doeleman of the Haystack Observatory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the real action – or more precisely, the gravitational structures that the researchers are keen on observing – happens very close to the black hole itself. According to Doeleman, who is the lead astronomer at the EHT, observing such structures as they change and evolve is one of the main motivations of the group.

While black holes may have a far-reaching impact and a gargantuan mass – the largest detected to date is thought to have a mass 17 billion times that of our Sun – they are relatively small; the biggest of them could fit snugly within the solar system. Although SgrA* is the black hole with the largest “apparent” size as viewed from Earth, thanks to its proximity to us, trying to visually resolve its structures is as challenging as spotting an orange on the Moon. “Imagine your friend is holding a quarter in Los Angles and you’re standing in New York, and now you can read the date on the quarter,” says Doeleman.

Despite their name, black holes are not all dark. The gas and dust trapped around them in an accretion disc is so compact that it is often heated to billions of degrees even before it is swallowed, making the objects glow brightly. Indeed, general relativity also predicts that a black hole will have a “shadow” around it. Thanks to the immense gravity at the event horizon, the light generated by heated in-falling gas will follow a hyperbolic trajectory – sometimes even looping back on itself instead of travelling in a straight line. The result is a shadow-like ring that encloses a dark centre. The light may warp in such a way that it takes a 180° turn, which would allow astronomers to study the far side of the object.

The shadow is of great interest as its size and shape depends mainly on the mass, and to some small extent the possible spin, of the black hole, thereby revealing its inherent properties. Theoretical predictions based on general relativity have already ruled out certain shapes – an egg-shaped shadow for example, is not on the menu. Seeing SgrA*’s actual shadow will therefore be “yet another consistency check for general relativity,” says Avery Broderick of the University of Waterloo and the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Canada. Broderick, who is a theorist and part of the EHT team, has modelled what the shadow should look like. He told Physics World that the shadow’s appearance “encodes information about the surrounding space–time, acting like a CAT-scan of the environment”. These observations therefore “will set the stage for strong-gravity research”.

Directly observing SgrA*’s shadow, which is only 50 micro arcseconds across, is no mean feat. Astronomers would need a telescope with an angular resolution comparable to the event horizon; such an instrument would be roughly the same size as our planet, which is clearly impractical. The EHT astronomers will instead resort to a radio-astronomy technique known as very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI), in which synchronized radio signals, from an astronomical source, are picked up by a network of individual radio telescopes and telescopic arrays scattered across the globe.

Map of the radio telescopes that comprose the Event Horizon Telescope

The distance between each pair of telescopes or facilities determines a “baseline”, and together these baselines effectively create a massive virtual telescope the size of a continent or larger. The signals received at each “antenna” (each individual telescope dish) in the network are precisely tagged with a very accurate time stamp, normally using an atomic clock at each location. The signals are later correlated and used to build up a complete image.

The technique lets astronomers build up an Earth-scale telescope “mirror”, with only little points silvered at the spots where each antenna lies. As a radio source is observed over the course of a night, the Earth’s rotation means that each silvered point spins out into a line, filling in enough of the mirror to make an image. The resolution that can be achieved using the VLBI technique is proportional to the observing frequency, which is at the submillimetre wavelength for the EHT. Early measurements have shown that it is possible to resolve some of SgrA*’s structures at 1.3 mm. According to Broderick and Doeleman, these observations confirmed that short-wavelength VLBI can be used to directly probe SgrA*’s event horizon. Each antenna in the EHT will eventually detect SgrA* at very high frequencies to penetrate the dust and haze that surrounds it.

Connecting the dots

For their first set of measurements in 2007, the EHT astronomers linked up the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) in Hawaii, the Submillimeter Telescope in Arizona and the Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy (CARMA) in California. Since then, the team has successfully added the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) dish in Chile, the South Pole telescope, the Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique’s 30 m dish in Spain, and earlier this year the Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT) in Mexico. Broderick points out that all of the individual facilities “are wildly different, so putting them all together has been a challenge”.

When the EHT becomes fully functional in the next few years, it will consist of telescopes and arrays that extend from Hawaii to Spain, all of which will study SgrA* simultaneously. This will make it the highest-resolution instrument on Earth, taking images with up to 2000 times better resolution than the Hubble Space Telescope. The improvement is largely due to technological advances made in the last two years, including a doubling of the radio-frequency space within which the EHT can image, which has made the entire array more sensitive. The number of telescopes in the array itself has also been nearly doubled, and will continue to grow once the Plateau de Bure interferometer in France and the Greenland Telescope (under construction) join the EHT.

What the EHT astronomers are most excited about this year is the successful completion of their five-year-long programme to upgrade the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile to join the EHT. ALMA was designed so that each antenna pair creates a single baseline, the longest of which can be up to 16 km. For ALMA to be able to synch with the other EHT telescopes, the EHT team and the astronomers and engineers in Chile needed to turn ALMA into a “phased array”, such that its 66 individual antennae function as a single radio dish 85 m in diameter. In this kind of an array, the signals from each antenna are added together, which for ALMA requires adding specialized electronic equipment and computing abilities designed and built at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in the US, the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan and MIT’s Haystack Observatory.

A key piece of technology added last year was a custom-built hydrogen maser that the EHT team installed, which allows ALMA’s data to be time-stamped so they can be processed with the other sites’ data. Following the upgrade, ALMA joined forces with APEX in January this year to create a 2.08 km baseline – a proof-of-principle test to check that ALMA can synch with the EHT by spring 2017 at the latest. ALMA and APEX simultaneously observed a quasar, “0522-364”, which is a very radio-bright source. ALMA successfully used its new maser to ensure both telescopes were truly in synch by time-stamping the data, which are now being processed at MIT. According to Doeleman, the successful observation marked “a huge step toward making first images of a black hole” with the EHT.

Beyond the veil

Once the EHT is fully ready, Doeleman hopes that astronomers will be able to do more than image SgrA*’s shadow and that they will be able to detect structural changes in the morphology of SgrA* in real time. Black-hole shadows were originally thought to be static, but according to Doeleman, our latest understanding suggests that they may vary, changing shape as the black hole accretes more mass.

A simulated shadow of SgrA*’s event horizon

This, he says, was initially seen as a problem – their image could get “smeared out” when SgrA* is active (it is currently relatively quiet as there is not too much matter falling into it). But Doeleman realized that this potential bug could become a feature – even if the researchers cannot take an image when SgrA* is swallowing matter.  By using triplets of the EHT’s antennae in combination, the astronomers could look for real-time changes in the accretion flow, thereby detecting what Doeleman describes as the object’s “very heartbeat”. They would then be looking at the evolution of a black hole’s structure, resolved in real time. This is surprisingly easy: if SgrA* is indeed a non-spinning black hole, as our current theories suggest, then matter trapped in its accretion disc should revolve around the hole once every half hour. If SgrA*is spinning, this number would drop to mere minutes for matter moving in the same direction as its spin, or increase to around five hours if the matter were moving in the opposite direction. Either way, this means that the EHT could potentially see structural changes several times during a single night’s observation – an amazing feat considering the vast timescales normally involved in astronomy.

Valued-added science

One of the main benefits of the EHT is that no new telescopes or arrays need to be built specifically for it. Instead, EHT astronomers simply book time on already existing telescopes and add some extra hardware and software (such as ALMA’s maser) where needed. Indeed, Broderick describes it as a “value-added project” as it is ultimately much cheaper than building a facility from scratch. Doeleman adds that they were purposefully slow and measured in building up the EHT’s current array – which has been on the drawing board since 2008 – by proving to staff at each site that they can deliver interesting results, thanks to the successful observations made to date.

Despite the benefits, coordinating with lots of people all over the world to determine policies and funding is tricky. Another problem is having to send experts to far-flung locations for each of the EHT’s observational runs, which means that the group members spend a lot of time travelling. They also miss the odd observational window when there are unexpectedly good weather conditions at all the sites. In the future, the group plans to put specific software into place at each site, such that the telescopes can be remotely accessed from a central location.

Data are currently recorded on custom-built high-capacity, high-speed hard-drives that are filled with helium and are hermetically sealed to stop them being damaged by the extreme conditions (such as low atmospheric pressure) where most of the telescopes are located. The data-filled drives at each location are then flown to centres in Europe and MIT to be processed. Doeleman explains that with so much data collected in a single night’s observation, air travel is surprisingly the fastest and most secure means of transmission. The team therefore has to quickly transfer the recorded data and send the drives back for the next round of observations. Doeleman hopes that they can make this process more efficient in the near future, especially when the number of data gathered will be up to 1 petabyte per site for each five-day observational session when the array is running at full capacity.

Adventure science

With the EHT researchers spanning the globe, they are currently transforming from an ad-hoc group to a real collaboration. And that progress is helped by a history of successful results and long-term collaborations with facilities like ALMA.

For Doeleman, the project embodies the spirit of “adventure science”, motivating team members as they scatter to high-altitude sites from Hawaii to Mexico all the way to the South Pole. “There is some faint echo, which reaches back across 100 years, to the kind of observations that were done to first vet general relativity,” he adds, referring to Karl Schwarzschild reportedly solving Einstein’s field equations in the trenches of the First World War, and Arthur Eddington who travelled to Brazil to observe the 1919 solar eclipse in a bid to confirm Einstein’s prediction that the light from stars close to the Sun would be distorted. “This is one of the aspects of the project that really resonates with people,” says Doeleman. “At least, that is what gets me going.”

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