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CDAC supports graduate student research and training in the area of high pressure materials science, broadly defined. We accept proposals on a continuing basis from faculty interested in joining the CDAC team as academic partners. Student support consists of salary, tuition/fees and some travel to CDAC facilities for experiments. Please send a one-page statement of research interests and plans to Steve Gramsch, CDAC Coordinator by January 16, 2009.
CDAC high school intern Maneeshika Madduri was a semifinalist in the 2008 Siemens Competition for Math, Science, and Technology with her project on hydrogen complexation studies in crown ethers. Congratulations!
Steven Jacobsen, CDAC Academic Partner from Northwestern (and former Barbara McClintock Postdoctoral Fellow at the Geophysical Laboratory) has been awarded a Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering. Jacobsen is among 20 scientists selected nationally this year to receive this grant. The funding will support development of Jacobsen’s nano-pulsed GHz-ultrasonic method to study atomic-scale, physical properties of superhard materials targeted for future technological applications
The Carnegie Institution held its annual Summer Scholars Research Symposium on Wednesday, August 6th. The ten students participating in the program this year presented the results of their work for the entire Broad Branch Road campus community. The presentations covered a wide range of topics, including mineral physics, organic geochemistry, astrobiology, petrology, seismology and astronomy.
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Russell Hemley has been elected Honoris Causa Professor for Energetics, Mechanics, Machinery, and Control Systems of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS). The academy is the leading scientific body in Russia. Founded in 1724, it is one of the oldest such organizations in the world. The degree is awarded to the most eminent foreign scientists.
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"High Pressure Mineral Physics - A Key to Earth Structure" - A Symposium in Honor of Ronald Cohen Goldschmidt 2009 Davos, Switzerland June 21-26, 2009 More Meetings & Symposia |
| Electronic heat trap found in deep Earth |
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The key to understanding Earth’s evolution, including how our atmosphere gained oxygen and how volcanoes and earthquakes form is too look deep, really deep, into the lower mantle some 400 to 1,800 miles (660 to 2,900 kilometers) below the surface. Researchers , led by Alexander Goncharov (Geophysical Laboratory) and including Carnegie Summer Scholar Ben Haugen (University of Colorado) and new CDAC partner Steven Jacobsen (Northwestern), mimicked conditions of these depths and recently discovered that the concentration of highly oxidized iron (Fe3+) in the two major mantle minerals—silicate perovskite and ferropericlase—is key to moving radiative heat in that region, and that influences material movement throughout the planet. They also discovered that less oxidized iron (Fe2+) has much less effect than expected — 2 to 5 times lower than previous models suggested. The results, which are reported Nature, call into question current models of mantle dynamics.
The team developed a new optical spectroscopy system to reveal how matter absorbs heat from infrared through ultraviolet wavelengths; in addition they measured how energy is dissipated. They subjected the minerals to mantle pressures—up to 1.3 million atmospheres at room temperature and subjected ferropericlase to 590,000 atmospheres at temperatures up to 1160°F. The scientists found that heat absorption is governed by the concentration of ferric (Fe3+) iron in silicate perovskite and ferropericlase. They also noted changes in absorption related to spin-state transition, but the effects were smaller than previously believed. Spin transition occurs when electrons are bunched closely together under severe pressures and the spinning electrons are forced to pair up from unpaired electrons—a high-spin state—to paired electrons—a low-spin state. Their results for silicate perovskite in the visible and near infrared for radiative heat absorption showed that it is dominated by the charge transfer of electrons during oxidation—when electrons are lost— in the oxide O-Fe3+ [Goncharov, et al., Nature, 456, 231-234 (2008)]. |
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CDAC high school intern Maneeshika Madduri was a semifinalist in the 2008 Siemens Competition for Math, Science, and Technology with her project on hydrogen complexation studies in crown ethers. Congratulations!
Steven Jacobsen, CDAC Academic Partner from Northwestern (and former Barbara McClintock Postdoctoral Fellow at the Geophysical Laboratory) has been awarded a Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering. Jacobsen is among 20 scientists selected nationally this year to receive this grant. The funding will support development of Jacobsen’s nano-pulsed GHz-ultrasonic method to study atomic-scale, physical properties of superhard materials targeted for future technological applications
The Carnegie Institution held its annual Summer Scholars Research Symposium on Wednesday, August 6th. The ten students participating in the program this year presented the results of their work for the entire Broad Branch Road campus community. The presentations covered a wide range of topics, including mineral physics, organic geochemistry, astrobiology, petrology, seismology and astronomy.
Russell Hemley has been elected Honoris Causa Professor for Energetics, Mechanics, Machinery, and Control Systems of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS). The academy is the leading scientific body in Russia. Founded in 1724, it is one of the oldest such organizations in the world. The degree is awarded to the most eminent foreign scientists.
The key to understanding Earth’s evolution, including how our atmosphere gained oxygen and how volcanoes and earthquakes form is too look deep, really deep, into the lower mantle some 400 to 1,800 miles (660 to 2,900 kilometers) below the surface. Researchers , led by Alexander Goncharov (Geophysical Laboratory) and including Carnegie Summer Scholar Ben Haugen (University of Colorado) and new CDAC partner Steven Jacobsen (Northwestern), mimicked conditions of these depths and recently discovered that the concentration of highly oxidized iron (Fe3+) in the two major mantle minerals—silicate perovskite and ferropericlase—is key to moving radiative heat in that region, and that influences material movement throughout the planet. They also discovered that less oxidized iron (Fe2+) has much less effect than expected — 2 to 5 times lower than previous models suggested. The results, which are reported Nature, call into question current models of mantle dynamics.
The team developed a new optical spectroscopy system to reveal how matter absorbs heat from infrared through ultraviolet wavelengths; in addition they measured how energy is dissipated. They subjected the minerals to mantle pressures—up to 1.3 million atmospheres at room temperature and subjected ferropericlase to 590,000 atmospheres at temperatures up to 1160°F. The scientists found that heat absorption is governed by the concentration of ferric (Fe3+) iron in silicate perovskite and ferropericlase. They also noted changes in absorption related to spin-state transition, but the effects were smaller than previously believed. Spin transition occurs when electrons are bunched closely together under severe pressures and the spinning electrons are forced to pair up from unpaired electrons—a high-spin state—to paired electrons—a low-spin state. Their results for silicate perovskite in the visible and near infrared for radiative heat absorption showed that it is dominated by the charge transfer of electrons during oxidation—when electrons are lost— in the oxide O-Fe3+