
Researcher used a laser to superheat a sample of gold and measured its temperature with a pulse of ultra-bright X-rays
Greg Stewart/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Wafer-thin sheets of gold shot briefly with lasers can be heated up to 14 times their melting point while remaining solid, far beyond the theoretical limit, raising the possibility that some solids may have no upper melting point at all.
Superheating is a common phenomenon where a solid can heat up beyond its melting point, or a liquid can heat up past its boiling…
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