gamma radiation

Rare Molecule Created in the Lab for the First Time


Physicists at University of California, Riverside have created a rare molecule in the lab, positronium, that could eventually aid in fusion power generation or gamma ray lasers. The positronium molecules are each made up of a pair of electrons and their antimatter twins, positrons. The work, described in the most recent issue of the journal Nature, involves shooting bursts of positrons at a thin film of silica. Electrons within the silica can trap the positrons, creating a short-lived molecule of positronium.

If two of these positronium particles happen to bump into one another before disappearing, they annihilate themselves and give off a burst of gamma radiation—hence the potential for a gamma laser. Though lead researcher David Cassidy (pictured, on the left) does bear a resemblance to the lead character of a certain 2003 film detailing the effects of gamma radiation, there's no evidence that he's unlikeable when angry.—Gregory Mone

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It's the Nanomeds, Stupid

The Issue: The new comic-book movies take pains to update science-speak. The lingo is nonsense, but it sure is a hoot

First off, let me just say that i'll enjoy watching The Thing, a 600-pound creature made of orange rock, stop an oncoming 18-wheeler with his shoulder every bit as much as the next guy. But it's not the action scenes that get me excited about a movie like The Fantastic Four, which premieres on July 8. Whenever a new comic-book movie debuts, I get a kick out of seeing how the filmmakers finesse the science.

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