Scientists have just created the world's lightest
form of magnesium — a never-before-seen isotope with just six neutrons in its
atomic nuclei — inside a giant atom smasher.
And while the substance disintegrates too quickly
to be measured directly, the researchers expect their discovery will help
scientists better understand how atoms are constructed. That's because such
exotic isotopes — versions of chemical elements with either more or fewer
neutrons in their nuclei than usual — can help define the limits of the models
that scientists use to figure out how atoms work.
"By testing these models in making them
better and better we can extrapolate out to how things work where we can't
measure them," said Kyle Brown, a chemist at the Facility for Rare Isotope
Beams at Michigan State University in East Lansing. "We're measuring the
things we can measure to predict the things we can't."
The new magnesium isotope — called magnesium-18 —
won't fill all the gaps in scientific knowledge about atoms, but the discovery
will help refine the theories that scientists have developed to explain them,
he said. In particular, the team's measurements of the products of the
isotope's radioactive decay give new insights into the binding energies of
electrons that orbit a nucleus, according to a summary of the research.
Atomic nuclei
Under normal conditions, pure magnesium is a soft
gray metal with the atomic number 12, which indicates it has 12 protons —
particles with a positive charge — in its nucleus. It's highly flammable, and
the intense white light from a burning magnesium strip often dazzles students
in chemistry classes.
Like many chemical elements, magnesium originates
in the fusion reactions of aging stars, and it's found on Earth because those
long-dead stars have exploded as supernovas and "seeded" the
interstellar clouds that formed our solar system. Magnesium is relatively
abundant in the Earth's crust and it has an important chemical role in many
biological and industrial compounds.
The most common stable isotope of magnesium has 12
neutrons — particles with a neutral charge — in each nucleus, giving this
version of the element an atomic mass of 24. As a result, it's called
magnesium-24.
For their experiments, the researchers accelerated
a beam of magnesium-24 nuclei to about half the speed of light inside the
National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory at MSU — a circular,
ultra-high-energy particle accelerator. They then fired the high-speed beam of
magnesium nuclei at a target of metal foil made of beryllium.
The collision in that step of the process yielded
a "soup" of lighter magnesium isotopes the researchers could select
from — among them the unstable isotope magnesium-20, which holds just eight
neutrons per nucleus and radioactively decays in a few tenths of a second.
Working against the clock, the researchers then
fired the magnesium-20 nuclei — again at about half the speed of light — at yet
another beryllium target, about 100 feet (30 meters) away.
One of the products of the resulting collision was
the newly-discovered isotope, magnesium-18 — the "lightest" isotope
of magnesium ever seen, with 12 protons and just six neutrons in its nucleus.
Rare isotope
Most atomic nuclei quickly "cloak"
themselves with electrons — particles with a negative charge — from their
environment and become elemental atoms, which then can combine with atoms of
other types to make chemical compounds.
But the newly-discovered magnesium-18 isotope is
radically unstable and very short-lived: With so few neutrons, the nucleus
quickly falls apart, with a half-life — the time it takes for half of its
nuclei to disintegrate from radioactive decay — of less than one-sextillionth
of a second, or 10^-21 seconds.
That means, it disappears much too quickly for a
nucleus of magnesium-18 to even have the chance to cloak itself with electrons'
and so it exists — and only very briefly — as "naked" nuclei.
The isotope is so short-lived, in fact, that the
magnesium-18 never leaves the beryllium target but decays inside it — and so
the researchers deduced its presence from the telltale products of its decay:
stray protons and the isotopes neon-16 and oxygen-14, the statement said.
"This was a team effort," Brown said.
"It's pretty exciting — it's not every day people discover a new
isotope."
Scientists have now identified several thousand
isotopes of the 118 common elements in the periodic table, and more are
discovered every year.
"We're adding drops to a bucket, but they are
important drops," Brown said. "We can put our names on this one, the
whole team can. And I tell my parents that I helped discover this nucleus that
nobody else has seen before."
Brown is a lead author of an article describing
the discovery published last week in the journal Physical Review Letters.
Scientists from Peking University in China and Washington University in St.
Louis were also involved.
Originally published on Live Science.