Tag Archives: phases

New phases of water detected

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Scientists at the University of Cambridge have discovered that water in a one-molecule layer acts like neither a liquid nor a solid, and that it becomes highly conductive at high pressures.

Much is known about how “bulk water” behaves: it expands when it freezes, and it has a high boiling point. But when water is compressed to the nanoscale, its properties change dramatically.

By developing a new way to predict this unusual behavior with unprecedented accuracy, the researchers have detected several new phases of water at the molecular level.

Water trapped between membranes or in tiny nanoscale cavities is common—it can be found in everything from membranes in our bodies to geological formations. But this nanoconfined water behaves very differently from the water we drink.

Until now, the challenges of experimentally characterizing the phases of water on the nanoscale have prevented a full understanding of its behavior. But in a paper published in the journal Nature, the Cambridge-led team describe how they have used advances in computational approaches to predict the phase diagram of a one-molecule thick layer of water with unprecedented accuracy.

They used a combination of computational approaches to enable the first-principles level investigation of a single layer of water.

The researchers found that water which is confined into a one-molecule thick layer goes through several phases, including a “hexatic” phase and a “superionic” phase. In the hexatic phase, the water acts as neither a solid nor a liquid, but something in between. In the superionic phase, which occurs at higher pressures, the water becomes highly conductive, propelling protons quickly through ice in a way resembling the flow of electrons in a conductor.






First-principles simulation of the hexatic phase, corresponding to the 1.00 GPa and 340 K state point, in the presence of explicit carbon atoms at the revPBE0-D3 level of theory. Credit: Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05036-x

Understanding the behavior of water at the nanoscale is critical to many new technologies. The success of medical treatments can be reliant on how water trapped in small cavities in our bodies will react. The development of highly conductive electrolytes for batteries, water desalination, and the frictionless transport of fluids are all reliant on predicting how confined water will behave.






First-principles simulation of the superionic phase, corresponding to the 4.00 GPa and 600 K state point, in the presence of explicit carbon atoms at the revPBE0-D3 level of theory. While we observe dissociation in a 10 ps timescale we do not see any reactivity of the proton with the carbon atoms. Credit: Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05036-x

“For all of these areas, understanding the behavior of water is the foundational question,” said Dr. Venkat Kapil from Cambridge’s Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, the paper’s first author. “Our approach allows the study of a single layer of water in a graphene-like channel with unprecedented predictive accuracy.”

The researchers found that the one-molecule thick layer of water within the nanochannel showed rich and diverse phase behavior. Their approach predicts several phases which include the hexatic phase—an intermediate between a solid and a liquid—and also a superionic phase, in which the water has a high electrical conductivity.

“The hexatic phase is neither a solid nor a liquid, but an intermediate, which agrees with previous theories about two-dimensional materials,” said Kapil. “Our approach also suggests that this phase can be seen experimentally by confining water in a graphene channel.

“The existence of the superionic phase at easily accessible conditions is peculiar, as this phase is generally found in extreme conditions like the core of Uranus and Neptune. One way to visualize this phase is that the oxygen atoms form a solid lattice, and protons flow like a liquid through the lattice, like kids running through a maze.”

The researchers say this superionic phase could be important for future electrolyte and battery materials as it shows an electrical conductivity 100 to 1,000 times higher than current battery materials.

The results will not only help with understanding how water works at the nanoscale, but also suggest that “nanoconfinement” could be a new route into finding superionic behavior of other materials.


Predicting a new phase of superionic ice


More information:
Angelos Michaelides, The first-principles phase diagram of monolayer nanoconfined water, Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05036-x. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05036-x
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Marvel Teases Phases 5, 6, Avengers, Black Panther 2, Guardians, More – The Hollywood Reporter

Welcome to the Multiverse Saga.

Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige made a triumphant return to Comic-Con Saturday and got a hero’s welcome. The executive announced a pair of Avengers movies and revealed the official title for the next saga he’s been building. The Infinity Saga, which concluded with Avengers: Endgame, helped make Marvel the biggest brand in Hollywood. The new batch of projects fall under the title the Multiverse Saga.

“I’m unbelievably excited,” Feige said, noting there were times he wondered if he’d ever get back to the -Con, which was shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

The big news was a pair of Avengers films to come out just months apart. Avengers: The Kang Dynasty will arrive May 2, 2025, with another Avengers movie following months later. Avengers: Secret Wars hits Nov. 7, 2025. (Scroll to the bottom of this story for the full list of projects unveiled Saturday night.) No directors were revealed, but Endgame filmmakers the Russo brothers have long stated they would like to helm a Secret Wars film.

In typical Feige fashion, he began his panel with some news right away. Feige revealed that Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Nov. 11) will conclude the studio’s Phase 4 projects, with Ant-Man And the Wasp: Quantumania (Feb. 17, 2023) beginning Phase 5.

Feige shared a number of release dates (or in the case of his Disney+ shows, approximate dates), with Loki season two due out in summer 2022; the Hawkeye spinoff Echo debuting on Disney+ in summer 2023; Ironheart streaming in the fall of 2023; Mahershala Ali’s Blade movie opening in theaters Nov. 3, 2023; and the newly titled Kathryn Hahn/WandaVision spinoff Agatha: Coven of Chaos bowing on Disney+ in Winter 2023.

What’s more, he gave a title and date for Anthony Mackie’s Captain America film, revealing the title is Captain America: New World Order. It opens May 3, 2024. He also shared the title for Charlie Cox’s return to Daredevil, with Daredevil: Born Again being an 18-episode series on Disney+. Also starring Vincent D’Onofrio as Kingpin, the new Daredevil is expected in spring 2024. Meanwhile, the villain-focused film Thunderbolts will close Phase 5 with a date of July 26, 2024. Feige announced that Fantastic Four would kick off Phase 6 on Nov. 8, 2024.

Phase 4 was about “about resetting the MCU and meeting all these new characters,” post-Endgame, Feige said.

The world looked very different the last time Feige faced the 6,500-person Hall H. In July 2019, the executive laid out the studio’s Phase 4, post-Avengers: Endgame plans, which included robust theatrical and streaming releases. Then the coronavirus hit, shuttering movie theaters and disrupting Marvel’s release calendar. There were no Marvel movies for nearly two years, but now things are back on track and Marvel is busier than ever.

Feige trotted out filmmakers such as Ryan Coogler, James Gunn and Peyton Reed to look at their upcoming films. Read on for a recap of every project teased.

SHE-HULK

Early in the panel, Feige welcomed the team behind the Disney+ series She-Hulk to share a new trailer and to reveal that Cox’s Matt Murdock will appear in the series as an attorney. Though She-Hulk was described as a half-hour comedy, Feige noted the MCU “can make a tonal shift.” It can go from funny to “something dark, something gritty, something political thriller.”

Cobie Smulders

Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

SECRET INVASION

Next, Feige introduced Secret Invasion, the Skrull-focused project starring Samuel L. Jackson and Cobie Smulders. “You’re never going to know who people really are. Are they Skrull? Are they human?” Smulders said introducing a trailer that features Nick Fury (Jackson) returning to Earth after the events of Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019).

Paul Rudd

Chris Delmas/AFP/Getty Images

ANT-MAN AND THE WASP: QUANTUMANIA

Ant-Man 3 director Peyton Reed was next up, and touted that in his film, “We finally get to spend time in the Quantum Realm.” Star Paul Rudd noted that his character, Scott Lang, feels pretty happy with himself for helping save the universe in Endgame — and footage showed Lang reading from his memoir, which his loved ones think is a little overblown.

Later, Scott is sucked into the Quantum Realm, where he comes in contact with the villain Kang (Jonathan Majors). “There might have been a shot of MODOK,” Reed said of the footage, which also included Bill Murray in a mystery role. Majors, who joined the MCU with Loki as the big bad He Who Remains, noted the version in Loki is not the same character in Ant-Man 3 — he’s a different Variant.

James Gunn, Chris Pratt, Karen Gillan, Pom Klementieff, Sean Gunn, Will Poulter and Maria Bakalova.

Michael Buckner/Variety/Getty Images

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 3

“This is about the end.” That’s how filmmaker James Gunn described Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, the conclusion to a story he began with the 2014 film. In footage shown to the crowd, audiences learn that Gamora (Zoe Saldana), who disappeared at the end of Endgame, is now leading the Ravagers — the band of shady space people seen in previous films. The trailer, set to The Flaming Lips’ “Do You Realize?” sets up a doomed love story between Gamora and Peter Quill (Chris Pratt), who is sad to confirm she has no memories of her time with the Guardians. The footage also brought in new character Adam Warlock (Will Poulter) to cheers from the crowd and revealed that Rocket (Bradley Cooper) and his origin story would be a focus of the movie.

“He’s got to be the saddest creature in the universe. And that’s what this is partly about,” Gunn said of exploring Rocket’s origins.

The Guardians portion of the panel also revealed that Maria Bakalova is playing Cosmo the space dog, while Peacemaker actor Chukwudi Iwuji will portray the High Evolutionary.

BLACK PANTHER: WAKANDA FOREVER

Wakanda Forever filmmaker Ryan Coogler noted that the impact of late Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman, who died of colon cancer in 2020, remains present. Coogler then brought actor Tenoch Huerta to the stage, confirming he will play Namor in the film. Dominique Thorne, the star of the upcoming Ironheart series, will debut in Wakanda Forever and also made an appearance.

Coogler showed off the first trailer and shared a touching memory of being with Boseman five years ago for Comic-Con, when they promoted the first Panther. “His passion, his genius, his pride, his culture and the impact he made on this industry will be felt forever,” said Coogler.

Ryan Coogler

Michael Buckner/Variety/Getty Images

***

Read on for the full list of Marvel’s upcoming TV series and films, including those newly announced.

She-Hulk (Aug. 17)
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Nov. 11, 2022)
Ant-Man And the Wasp: Quantumania (Feb. 17, 2023)
Secret Invasion (spring 2023 — Disney+)
What If… season two (early 2023 — Disney+)
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (May 5, 2023)
Echo (summer 2023 — Disney+)
The Marvels (July 28, 2023)
Loki season two (summer 2023 — Disney+)
Blade (Nov. 3, 2023)
Daredevil: Born Again (spring 2024 — Disney+)
Captain America: New World Order (May 3, 2024)
Thunderbolts (July 26, 2024)
Ironheart (fall 2023 — Disney+)
Agatha: Coven of Chaos (Winter 2023 — Disney+)
Fantastic Four (Nov. 8, 2024)
Avengers: The Kang Dynasty (May 2, 2025)
Avengers: Secret Wars (Nov. 7, 2025)



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Elden Ring Gets a Major Patch to Fix Issues, Add Quest Phases, and Drop a New NPC

Elden Ring has received a major patch across all platforms, which fixes a number of bugs and even adds new content (or perhaps finishes some previously unfinished content).

Developer FromSoftware said in its patch notes that it’s added new phases to NPC questlines for Diallos, Nepheli Loux, Kenneth Haight, and Gatekeeper Gastoc, and has also added new NPC summons to some boss fights. It’s not clear if these quests are brand new, or close off questlines for characters that previously weren’t complete.

Players can also encounter a new NPC altogether, Jar-Bairn, a small living jar that can be found sitting on some steps in the north of Jarburg.

There’s now a way to track all these NPCs too, as FromSoftware has added a much-requested function to name icons on the map when you encounter an NPC, making it easier to keep track of where they all are. This includes Nomadic Merchants, who now have their own icon on the map.

In terms of balance updates, players will now find it easier to upgrade their weapons in the early game as the drop rate of Smithing Stones has been increased and the upgrade material has also been added to some shops.

A number of player items, weapons, and sorceries have also been made more effective and easier to use, alongside two dozen specific bug issues and general performance upgrades.

For a detailed breakdown of everything included in the patch notes, be sure to check out a breakdown in IGN’s Elden Ring updates guide.

The game continues to dominate the gaming sphere, topping sales charts in the United States and Europe, amassing to more than 12 million copies sold worldwide.

Just as many wacky stories have come out of Elden Ring’s success, such as players discovering a pair of fancy underwear hidden in the game. The game’s speedrun record is also being broken over and over, an infamous hacker is hunting down innocent players, Bandai Namco has made an insane advert, and it even has its own candy.

In our 10/10 review, IGN said: “Elden Ring is a massive iteration on what FromSoftware began with the Souls series, bringing its relentlessly challenging combat to an incredible open world that gives us the freedom to choose our own path.”

To make those choices with the best available information, check out our full guide that features everything you could ever hope to know about Elden Ring, including collectible locations, boss strategies, and more.

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Study: Leidenfrost effect occurs in all three water phases: Solid, liquid, and vapor

Slow-motion video of boiling ice, a research project of the Nature-Inspired Fluids and Interfaces Lab at Virginia Tech.

Dash a few drops of water onto a very hot, sizzling skillet and they’ll levitate, sliding around the pan with wild abandon. Physicists at Virginia Tech have discovered that this can also be achieved by placing a thin, flat disk of ice on a heated aluminum surface, according to a new paper published in the journal Physical Review Fluids. The catch: there’s a much higher critical temperature that must be achieved before the ice disk will levitate.

As we’ve reported previously, in 1756, a German scientist named Johann Gottlob Leidenfrost reported his observation of the unusual phenomenon. Normally, he noted, water splashed onto a very hot pan sizzles and evaporates very quickly. But if the pan’s temperature is well above water’s boiling point, “gleaming drops resembling quicksilver” will form and will skitter across the surface. It’s called the “Leidenfrost effect” in his honor.

In the ensuing 250 years, physicists came up with a viable explanation for why this occurs. If the surface is at least 400 degrees Fahrenheit (well above the boiling point of water), cushions of water vapor, or steam, form underneath them, keeping them levitated. The Leidenfrost effect also works with other liquids, including oils and alcohol, but the temperature at which it manifests will be different. 

The phenomenon continues to fascinate physicists. For instance, in 2018, French physicists discovered that the drops aren’t just riding along on a cushion of steam; as long as they are not too big, they also propel themselves. That’s because of an imbalance in the fluid flow inside the Leidenfrost drops, acting like a small internal motor. Large drops showed a balanced flow, but as the drops evaporated, becoming smaller (about half a millimeter in diameter) and more spherical, an imbalance of forces developed. This caused the drops to roll like a wheel, helped along by a kind of “ratchet” effect from a downward tilt in the same direction the fluid in the droplet flowed. The French physicists dubbed their discovery a “Leidenfrost wheel.”

In 2019, an international team of scientists finally identified the source of the accompanying cracking sound Leidenfrost reported. The scientists found that it depends on the size of the droplet. Smaller drops will skitter off the surface and evaporate, while larger drops explode with that telltale crack. The culprit is particle contaminants, present in almost any liquid. Larger drops will start out with a higher concentration of contaminants, and that concentration increases as the droplets shrink. They end up with such a high concentration that the particles slowly form a kind of shell around the droplet. That shell interferes with the vapor cushion holding the drop aloft, and it explodes when it hits the surface.

And last year, MIT scientists determined why the droplets are propelled across a heated oily surface 100 times faster than on bare metal. Under the right conditions, a thin coating formed outside each droplet, like a cloak. As the droplet got hotter, minuscule bubbles of water vapor began to form between the droplet and the oil, then moved away. Subsequent bubbles typically formed near the same spots, forming a single vapor trail that served to push the droplet in a preferred direction. 

But can you achieve the Leidenfrost effect with ice? That’s what the Virginia Tech team set out to discover. “There are so many papers out there about levitating liquid, we wanted to ask the question about levitating ice,” said co-author Jonathan Boreyko. “It started as a curiosity project. What drove our research was the question of whether or not it was possible to have a three-phase Leidenfrost effect with solid, liquid, and vapor.”

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Google says it won’t track you directly in the future as it phases out cookies

Google is clarifying its plans for targeted advertising as it phases out the use of browser cookies, saying in a new blog post Wednesday that it won’t use other ways to “track” users around the internet after it ends support for cookies in Chrome.

Last year, the company said it would be ending support for third-party cookies, which fuel much of the digital advertising ecosystem, in its Chrome browser within two years of January 2020. Instead, Google says it will only use “privacy-preserving technologies” that rely on methods like anonymization or aggregation of data.  

The blog post from David Temkin, director of product management for ads privacy and trust, says the company has been getting questions about whether Google will “join others in the ad tech industry who plan to replace third-party cookies with alternative user-level identifiers.” Ad tech players have been working on ways of marketing that balance consumer privacy while maintaining personalization in advertising after they can no longer use cookies. 

“Today, we’re making explicit that once third-party cookies are phased out, we will not build alternate identifiers to track individuals as they browse across the web, nor will we use them in our products,” the Google post says. 

Cookies are small pieces of code that web sites deliver to a visitor’s browser, and stick around as the person visits other sites. They can be used to track users across multiple sites, to target ads and see how they perform. Google said last year it would end support for those cookies in Chrome once it had figured out how to address the needs of users, publishers and advertisers and come up with tools to mitigate workarounds. The company said its intention was to do that within two years, by early 2022. 

To do so, Google launched its “Privacy Sandbox” initiative to find a solution that both protects user privacy and lets content remain free available on the open web. In January, Google said it was “extremely confident” about the progress of its proposals to replace cookies, and plans to start testing one proposal with advertisers in Google Ads next quarter. That proposal in particular, called “Federated Learning of Cohorts,” would essentially put people into groups based on similar browsing behaviors, meaning that only “cohort IDs” and not individual user IDs would be used to target them.

Google says this is about how its own ad products will work, and not restricting what can happen on Chrome by third parties. The company said it wouldn’t use Unified ID 2.0 or LiveRamp ATS in its ad products but wouldn’t speak specifically about any one initiative.

Unified ID 2.0 is an initiative a number of top ad-tech firms are working on together, which would rely on email addresses that are hashed and encrypted from consumers who give their consent. Public company LiveRamp also has what it calls its “Authenticated Traffic Solution,” which it says involves consumers opting in to gain control of their data, and on the other side, brands and publishers being able to use that data.

Temkin says in the post that other providers “may offer a level of user identity for ad tracking across the web that we will not — like PII graphs based on people’s email addresses.” 

“We don’t believe these solutions will meet rising consumer expectations for privacy, nor will they stand up to rapidly evolving regulatory restrictions, and therefore aren’t a sustainable long term investment,” the blog post says. “Instead, our web products will be powered by privacy-preserving APIs which prevent individual tracking while still delivering results for advertisers and publishers.” 

Google had briefed a number of major advertisers and groups on the post before Wednesday, including George Popstefanov, founder and CEO of digital agency PMG.

Popstefanov said in an email that while this is a dynamic shift “we have been preparing for it for a while.”

“Following last year’s announcement to phase out third-party cookies, many of our clients have been moving swiftly to build their data infrastructures and to invest in their CRM, to better leverage their first-party data,” he said. “The important thing is that consumer behavior isn’t fundamentally shifting, just our ability to track and measure behaviors as we’ve been accustomed to. The importance of strategic planning and insights will be more important than ever for understanding audiences and how to connect at the right times and in contextually relevant ways.”

He added that he believes Google is motivated to design its products and solutions to solve for the new reality.

“Marketers are already diversifying their spending in more areas up and down the funnel, so it will be incumbent on Google for its solutions to appeal to brands and to support marketers’ investments and impact,” he said.

Alec Stapp, director of technology policy at the Progressive Policy Institute, called Google’s news a step in the right direction for user privacy. The group has received funding from Google and other major tech players, Protocol reported last year.

“However, companies — even very large ones — can only do so much on their own,” he said in an email. “Policymakers need to step in and formalize rules that protect user privacy while being mindful of not burying users in an endless series of opt-in screens.”

Jon Halvorson, global VP of consumer experience Mondelez International, said the decision is consistent with feedback from consumers about what they want and expect. He said the company will be doing some testing in “FLoC” and will be building it into business plans for this year.  

“We don’t think that it can be privacy or performance, advertisers need and require both,” he said in an email.  

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The phases of the moon could affect your sleeping patterns, a study says

As we head toward the first full moon of the year on Thursday night, take note: In the days leading up to a full moon, people go to bed later and sleep less, according to a study published in Science Advances on Wednesday.

On average, participants went to bed 30 minutes later and slept 50 minutes less on nights before a full moon, said study coauthor Horacio de la Iglesia, professor at the department of biology at the University of Washington in Seattle.

Researchers outfitted each participant with a sleep monitor on their wrist to track sleep schedules over the course of one to two lunar cycles. A lunar cycle takes 29.5 days to complete.

Ninety-eight people from three different Toba Indigenous communities, also known as the Qom people, in Argentina participated in the study.

The light from the moon after sunset is bright on the days leading up to a full moon, said study coauthor Leandro Casiraghi, postdoctoral scholar at the department of biology at the University of Washington.

“We believe this modulation aims to take advantage of such moonlit nights which may be good for safe outdoor activities such as hunting or fishing, or for engaging in social interactions with other groups,” Casiraghi said via email.

One community had no access to electricity, one had some access to electricity, and one had full access to electricity. Regardless of their electricity access, there was a strong pattern that showed they all went to bed later and slept less in the days leading up to a full moon.

In the urban community, participants went to bed even later and slept less than the participants in rural communities. Casiraghi said he was surprised that the urban community was affected because he hypothesized only people in the rural communities would be affected by the lunar phases.

“The fact that this modulation was present even in communities with full access to electric light suggests that these effects are mediated by something other than moonlight itself,” Casiraghi said.

After collecting sleep data from Toba/Qom communities, researchers compared their results with sleep data that was collected from 464 Seattle students for another study and found the same sleeping pattern.

People’s biology and a community’s social patterns might also play a role in the sleep cycle found in this study, said Dr. Vsevolod “Seva” Polotsky, director of Sleep Basic Research and a professor at Johns Hopkins Medical School, who was not involved in the study.

People’s sleep is controlled by our circadian rhythm, an internal clock that regulates sleep for about a 24-hour period, but some people could have longer internal clocks, Polotsky said.

A prime example of the human body regulating itself over a longer period of time is a woman’s menstrual cycle, he said, which is roughly a month long. Other mammals have seasonal sleep schedules and hibernate for months at a time, Polotsky noted.

Social calendars might also affect someone’s sleep schedules, he said, such as going to bed later or sleeping longer on weekends.

For people who have trouble going to sleep, de la Iglesia recommended avoiding bright lights and screens during the evening hours and being especially proactive before a full moon when “most people are predisposed (to) have a delayed sleep start and a shorter sleep.”

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