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Dineutron decay observed for the first time.

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The experiment revealed a brand new form of nuclear decay, the process by which unstable atoms release energy and transform into more stable forms. But instead of emitting known patterns of radiation, the nucleus ejected two correlated neutrons simultaneously – a dineutron. Though physicists had long theorized about the existence of this form of decay, this was the first experiment to see the dineutron event in action.
“We have for the first time unambiguously observed dineutron decay and clearly identified it in beryllium-16,” said Artemis Spyrou, professor of nuclear physics.
The newly discovered dineutron decay mode joins the 15 other known forms of atomic decay, including double proton emission, double beta decay and double positron emission. The results hold promise to strengthen scientists’ understanding of the strong force that holds nuclei together and the processes taking place within neutron stars.
The researchers caught the act red-handed. Beryllium-16 is an unbound, unstable isotope with 4 protons and 12 neutrons that decays in less than a trillionth of a second. To produce the extremely short-lived nucleus, the physicists smashed a beam of boron-17 into a solid target, occasionally knocking out a proton and forming the desired beryllium-16.
The neutrons emitted by the newly produced but instantly decaying nucleus flew straight into the Modular Neutron Array (MoNA) neutron detector, while the remaining beryllium-14 nucleus was deflected by a powerful magnet into a separate device to be measured. The resulting events clearly showed two neutrons travelling closely together – a dineutron – through the MoNA detector at the same time that a beryllium-14 nucleus was detected, giving direct evidence of the dineutron decay. In addition, the neutrons were sure to have been emitted simultaneously because it requires more energy to emit one at a time, making the dineutron decay the preferred mode.


http://phys.org/news/2012-04-neutrons-discovery-dineutron.html
 
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I know, right? I hate it when I get...2 N's in my...space-thing-box on the right, when i should just have ONE "N."

<--not smart guy is not smart...but interesting article that is over my head nonetheless
 
So, does this mean that NOW we can finally get cold fusion power?

Are we there yet?

Are we there yet?

Are we there yet?

:biggrin:
 
Dineutron sounds like a cyborg dinosaur. I didn't bother reading the article because I didn't want to be disappointed by the actual definition.
 
Someone needs to photochop a "happy neutron face" in the "stable nucleui" column, and a whacked out, psychotic face in the "unstable nuclei" column. My contribution to science. 😀
 
16 different types of decay? I didn't realize there were that many!

Most of them are ridiculously rare - with a number of them only occurring in 1 known isotope, or requiring special conditions (e.g. excited electrons).

The common ones are:

Alpha
Spontaneous fission (heavy elements like uranium/plutonium will spontaneously fragment into 2 smaller nuclei)

Beta-
Beta+
Electron capture (Orbiting electron gets swallowed up, causing a proton to change into a neutron)

Isomeric transition (excited nucleus emits a gamma photon with no other change - ideal for use in medical scans. Only gamma photons are emitted which are only minimally absorbed in the body, ensuring that the actual absorbed radiation dose is minimized. Alpha and beta radiation would be absorbed in the body, and not escape - giving dose but no scanning benefit)
Internal conversion (gamma photon hits an electron on the way out, being absorbed and ejecting a high-speed electron).

There are all sorts of rare ones which only occur in a tiny proportion of decays in rare isotopes:
Proton emission
Neutron emission
Heavy nucleus emission (e.g. Neon nucleus or Magnesium nucleus)
Various double particle emissions
 
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