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1 Background  





2 Importance  





3 Chronology of notable events  





4 References  














Hafnium controversy






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The hafnium controversy was a debate over the possibility of 'triggering' rapid energy releases, via gamma ray emission, from a nuclear isomerofhafnium, 178m2Hf. Per event the energy release is 5 orders of magnitude (100,000 times) more energetic than in a typical chemical reaction, but 2 orders of magnitude less than a nuclear fission reaction. In 1998, a group led by Carl Collins of the University of Texas at Dallas reported[1][2] having successfully initiated such a trigger. Signal-to-noise ratios were small in those first experiments, and to date no other group has been able to duplicate these results. Peter Zimmerman (an American nuclear physicist and arms control expert) described claims of weaponization potential as having been based on "very bad science".[3]

Background[edit]

178m2Hf is a particularly interesting candidate for induced gamma emission (IGE) experiments, because 178m2Hf's energy is 2.5 MeV per nucleus higher than that of ground-state Hf, and it has a long 31-year half life. If much lower-energy radiation from some agent could "trigger" a release of that stored energy before most of this triggering radiation would be dissipated in competing processes, and if the triggering radiation could be regenerated efficiently by the 2.5 MeV gamma, it might be possible start a cascade of gamma photons. The long half life of 178m2Hf might make it possible to engineer a substance with enough of these energetic nuclei needed for stimulated emission, i.e. a gamma-ray laser. While induced emission of a high-energy photon by a lower-energy photon adds power to a radiation field, stimulated emission adds coherence.[4]

With all the caveats about dissipation of the triggering photon, and its efficient recreation by the energetic photon that is being triggered, the process could, in principle, lead to nuclear reaction engines, along with more precise radiometric devices. A proposal to show the efficacy for "triggering" 178m2Hf was approved by a NATO-Advanced Research Workshop (NATO-ARW) held in Predeal in 1995.[5] Although the proposal was to use incident protons to bombard the target, α-particles were available when the first experiment was scheduled. It was done by a French, Russian, Romanian and American team. Results were said [6] to be extraordinary, but the results were not published. Nevertheless, 178m2Hf was implied to be of special importance to potential applications of IGE. A controversy quickly erupted, mostly between the original proponents of 178m2Hf as having potential military applications as a gamma-ray laser weapon or a non-neutronic but still nuclear-like explosive, and critics who discounted such possibilities due to practical obstacles along the way: 178m2Hf is difficult to make and virtually impossible to separate from the Hf ground state, the absorption of lower-energy triggering x-rays by the bound electrons around the Hf nucleus, and the minute probability to recreate the trigger-capable x-ray starting with the triggered x-ray itself by multiple random scattering. Still, the military application was enticing enough to try to make 178m2Hf into something useful (rather than an intriguing nucleus suitable for academic study only).

Importance[edit]

Chronology of notable events[edit]

Experiment producing IGE from a sample of the nuclear isomer 178m2Hf. (left to right) Students on duty; (w/ladder) the world's most stable beamline for monochromatic X-rays, BL01B1; (rt.) main ring of the SPring-8 synchrotron at Hyogo.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Collins, C.B., Davanloo, F., Iosif, M.; et al. (1999). "Accelerated Emission of Gamma Rays from the 31-yr Isomer of 178Hf Induced by X-Ray Irradiation". Physical Review Letters. 82 (4): 695–698. Bibcode:1999PhRvL..82..695C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.82.695.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ Collins, C.B., Davanloo, F., Rusu, A.C.; et al. (2000). "Gamma emission from the 31-yr isomer of 178Hf induced by x-ray irradiation". Physical Review C. 61 (5): 054305–054305–7. Bibcode:2000PhRvC..61e4305C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.61.054305.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ Peter Zimmerman (June 2007). "The Strange Tale of the Hafnium Bomb: A Personal Narrative". American Physical Society. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  • ^ Thomsen, D. E. (1 November 1986). "Pumping Up Hope for a Gamma Ray Laser". Science News. Society for Science & the Public. doi:10.2307/3970900. JSTOR 3970900.
  • ^ Proceedings of the NATO-ARW are collected in Hyperfine Interactions, 107, pp 3–492 (1997).
  • ^ "Link to review of "Isomer Triggering history from one participant". Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2010-03-31.
  • ^ N. Lewis; R. Garwin; D. Hammer; W. Happer; R. Jeanloz; J. Katz; S. Koonin; P. Weinberger; E. Williams (October 1997). High Energy Density Explosives (PDF). JSR-97-110. Sect. 4, p. 13.
  • ^ S. Weinberger (28 March 2004). "Scary things come in small packages". Sunday Supplement Magazine. Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2011-08-23. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  • ^ Bertram Schwarzschild (May 2004). "Conflicting Results on a Long-Lived Nuclear Isomer of Hafnium Have Wider Implications". Physics Today. Vol. 57, no. 5. pp. 21–24. Bibcode:2004PhT....57e..21S. doi:10.1063/1.1768663.
  • ^ San Jose newspaper article., October, 2003.
  • ^ C. Rusu (PhD Dissertation, U of Texas at Dallas, 2002)Available from: Proquest (Order Number: 3087127) Archived 2005-10-15 at the Wayback Machine.
  • ^ a b Publications by Center for Quantum Electronics Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine, University of Texas at Dallas Retrieved on 2010-12-12.
  • ^ C.B. Collins, N.C. Zoita, F. Davanloo, Y. Yoda, T. Uruga, J.M.Pouvesle, and I.I. Popescu (2005). "Nuclear resonance spectroscopy of the 31-yr isomer of Hf-178". Laser Physics Letters. 2 (3): 162–167. Bibcode:2005LaPhL...2..162C. doi:10.1002/lapl.200410154. S2CID 121707178.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ Ahmad, I.; et al. (2001). "Search for X-Ray Induced Acceleration of the Decay of the 31-Yr Isomer of 178Hf Using Synchrotron Radiation". Physical Review Letters. 87 (7): 072503. Bibcode:2001PhRvL..87g2503A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.87.072503. PMID 11497887.
  • ^ Ahmad, I.; et al. (2003). "Search for x-ray induced decay of the 31-yr isomer of 178Hf at low x-ray energies". Physical Review C. 67 (4): 041305R. Bibcode:2003PhRvC..67d1305A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.67.041305. S2CID 209833094.
  • ^ Tkalya, Eugene V. (2003). "Probability of L-shell nuclear excitation by electronic transitions in 178Hfm2". Physical Review C. 68 (6): 064611. Bibcode:2003PhRvC..68f4611T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.68.064611.
  • ^ Tkalya, Eugene V. (2005). "Induced decay of 178Hfm2: Theoretical analysis of experimental results". Physical Review C. 71 (2): 024606. Bibcode:2005PhRvC..71b4606T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.71.024606.
  • ^ Tkalya, Evgenii V (2005). "Induced decay of the nuclear isomer 178m2Hf and the 'isomeric bomb'". Physics-Uspekhi. 48 (5): 525–531. Bibcode:2005PhyU...48..525T. doi:10.1070/PU2005v048n05ABEH002190. S2CID 250864125. [Uspekhi Fiz. Nauk 175, 555 (2005)].
  • ^ Pereira; et al. (2007). "Economics of isomeric energy". Laser Physics. 17 (6): 874–879. Bibcode:2007LaPhy..17..874P. doi:10.1134/S1054660X0706014X. S2CID 122665613.
  • ^ Hartouni, E.P, et al., "Theoretical Assessment of 178m2Hf De-excitation, LLNL Report TR-407631, October 9, 2008, p.33. https://e-reports-ext.llnl.gov/pdf/366265.pdf
  • ^ Karamian, S. E.; et al. (2009). "Spallation and fission products in the (p+179Hf) and (p+natHf) reactions" (PDF). Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research A. 600 (2): 488–497. Bibcode:2009NIMPA.600..488K. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2008.12.001.
  • Also note:


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