News and Events

Thumbnail of The Veins of Heaven
Transfusing sunlight as the sky grew darker, this exceptional display of noctilucent clouds was captured on July 10, reflected in the calm waters of Vallentuna Lake near Stockholm, Sweden. From the edge of space, about 80 kilometers above Earth's surface, the icy clouds themselves still reflect sunlight, even though the Sun is below the horizon as seen from the ground. Usually spotted at high latitudes in summer months, the night shining clouds have made a strong showing so far during the short northern summer nights. Also known as polar mesopheric clouds they are understood to form as water vapor driven into the cold upper atmosphere condenses on the fine dust particles supplied by disintegrating meteors or volcanic ash.
Mount Timpanogos with sky above
Temp:  81 °FN2 Boiling:75.9 K
Humidity: 18%H2O Boiling:   368.5 K
Pressure:86 kPaSunrise:6:07 AM
Sunlight:0 W/m²   Sunset:8:57 PM
Image for Particle Physics Class
After 3 years of being offered as 513R, elementary particle physics is finally an official course and accepted for credit in the physics major!
Image for Acoustics Major Officially Offered at BYU
The BYU Physics & Astronomy department recently introduced the Applied Physics: Acoustics degree.
Image for A Practical Scientist’s Field Guide to Dealing with Science and Religion.
Dr. Michael Ware hopes to help students develop the skills to navigate discussion of science and religion
Image for Dr. John Colton’s Sabbatical to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Dr. John Colton embarked on a six-month sabbatical at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Colorado to explore the use of terahertz radiation in probing the chiral properties of hybrid perovskite materials, a research area previously unfamiliar to him.

Selected Publications

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Emma Zappala and Benjamin A. Frandsen (et al.)

CrMnFeCoNi, also called the Cantor alloy, is a well-known high-entropy alloy whose magnetic properties have recently become a focus of attention. We present a detailed muon spin relaxation study of the influence of chemical composition and sample processing protocols on the magnetic phase transitions and spin dynamics of several different Cantor alloy samples. Specific samples studied include a pristine equiatomic sample, samples with deficient and excess Mn content, and equiatomic samples magnetized in a field of 9 T or plastically deformed in pressures up to 0.5 GPa. The results confirm the sensitive dependence of the transition temperature on composition and demonstrate that post-synthesis pressure treatments cause the transition to become significantly less homogeneous throughout the sample volume. In addition, we observe critical spin dynamics in the vicinity of the transition in all samples, reminiscent of canonical spin glasses and magnetic materials with ideal continuous phase transitions. Application of an external magnetic field suppresses the critical dynamics in the Mn-deficient sample, while the equiatomic and Mn-rich samples show more robust critical dynamics. The spin-flip thermal activation energy in the paramagnetic phase increases with Mn content, ranging from 3.1(3) ×10−21J for 0% Mn to 1.2(2)×10−20J for 30% Mn content. These results shed light on critical magnetic behavior in environments of extreme chemical disorder and demonstrate the tunability of spin dynamics in the Cantor alloy via chemical composition and sample processing.

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Bowen J. Houser, Alyson N. Camacho, Camille A. Bryner, Masa Ziegler, Justin B. Wood, Ashley J. Spencer, Rajendra P. Gautam, Tochukwu P. Okonkwo, Karine Chesnel, Roger G. Harrison, and William G. Pitt (et al.)

In medical infections such as blood sepsis and in food quality control, fast and accurate bacteria analysis is required. Using magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) for bacterial capture and concentration is very promising for rapid analysis. When MNPs are functionalized with the proper surface chemistry, they have the ability to bind to bacteria and aid in the removal and concentration of bacteria from a sample for further analysis. This study introduces a novel approach for bacterial concentration using polydopamine (pDA), a highly adhesive polymer often purported to create antibacterial and antibiofouling coatings on medical devices. Although pDA has been generally studied for its ability to coat surfaces and reduce biofilm growth, we have found that when coated on magnetic nanoclusters (MNCs), more specifically iron oxide nanoclusters, it effectively binds to and can remove from suspension some types of bacteria. This study investigated the binding of pDA-coated MNCs (pDA-MNCs) to various Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, including Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and several E. coli strains. MNCs were successfully coated with pDA, and these functionalized MNCs bound a wide variety of bacterial strains. The efficiency of removing bacteria from a suspension can range from 0.99 for S. aureus to 0.01 for an E. coli strain. Such strong capture and differential capture have important applications in collecting bacteria from dilute samples found in medical diagnostics, food and water quality monitoring, and other industries.

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Yance Sun and Justin Peatross (et al.)

We investigate theoretically nonlinear Thomson scattering by multiple electrons ionized from individual atoms during a short high-intensity laser pulse. The emitted light is influenced by the distance that the electrons move apart from each other during the passage of the pulse, owing to coherence effects. We examine trajectories of electrons born from the same atom via successive ionizations as the laser pulse ramps up. While the overall trajectory of an individual electron is influenced by the ponderomotive force, we find that the separation between electrons arises mostly from stronger and differing initial drift velocities associated with the moment of ionization in the laser field. In the case of helium, we find that the separation between its two ionized electrons becomes appreciable (compared to emitted wavelengths) primarily along the dimension of laser linear polarization. This distorts the angular emission patterns of nonlinear Thomson scattering in comparison with emission from individual free electrons. Radiation scattered perpendicular to the laser polarization tends to add constructively, while radiation scattered along the direction of linear laser polarization tends to add incoherently. This effect becomes more pronounced for atoms with higher numbers of ionized electrons. The effect influences primarily the lower harmonic orders.

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Joshua T. Mills, Peter K. Jensen, and Micah R. Shepherd

Vehicles in the upper atmosphere travel through increasingly rarefied media. As acoustic radiation is dependent upon its media, acoustic radiation losses of vibrating structures in lower density air are investigated. An aluminum Euler beam is placed in a vacuum chamber, supported by thin nylon wires at known nodal positions, according to the excited mode. These strings are laced across a large cavity in a small steel table, effectively minimizing losses due to boundary supports. An impulse hammer excites the beam into its flexural state, while a laser vibrometer measures the velocity response. Extraction of mechanical loss factors occurs as the vacuum pressure increases (atmospheric pressure decreases) in experimental increments, thus determining the dependence of acoustic radiation losses on the rarefied media. Analysis of experimental results is presented as a topic of discussion for vibrations of launch vehicles and satellites. Other inferences and inductions are also considered.

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Alexandra M. Hopps-McDaniel and Tracianne B. Neilsen (et al.)

The very low-frequency noise from merchant ships provides a good broadband sound source to study the deep layers of the seabed. The nested striations that characterize ship time-frequency spectrograms contain unique acoustic features corresponding to where the waveguide invariant beta becomes infinite. In this dataset, these features occur at frequencies between 20 and 80 Hz, where pairs of modal group velocities become equal. The goal of this study is to identify these beta = infinity frequencies in ship noise spectrograms and use them to perform statistical inference for the deep layer sound speeds and thicknesses in the New England Mudpatch for a larger number of ships and acoustic arrays over a larger geographical region than previously studied. Marginal probability distributions of the data indicate that using singular points for a feature-based inversion yields an estimate of the sound speed and a limiting value for the thickness of the first deep layer. Heterogeneity is examined by correlating spatial variability of the deep layer sound speeds with ship tracks.

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Scott G Call, Eric G Hintz, and Timothy D Morrell (et al.)

We present time-series near-infrared spectra for the classical Cepheid, CP Cephei, from the Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5-m telescope and near-infrared spectrograph, TripleSpec, at Apache Point Observatory, NM, USA. Spectral observations were made at nine points through the minimum and partway up the ascending portion of the optical light curve for the star. Carbon monoxide (CO) was detected in absorption in the 2.3-$\mu$m region for each observation. We measured the strength of CO absorption using the 2-0 band head in the feature for each observation and confirm that the CO varies with pulsation. We show that these measurements follow the $(J-K)$ colour curve, confirming that temperature drives the destruction of CO. By obtaining convolved filter magnitudes from the spectral data we found that the effect of the CO feature on K magnitudes is small, unlike the CO feature in the mid-infrared at 4.5 $\mu$m. The dissociation of CO in the near-infrared spectra tracks with the effect seen in the mid-infrared photometric measurements of a similar Galactic Cepheid. Confirmation of the varying CO feature illustrates the need for further investigations into the related mid-infrared period-colour-metallicity relation in order to address the impact of Cepheid metallicities on the Hubble tension.