Opposites attract? Not in new experiment that finds loophole in fundamental rule of physics

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Ben Turner is a U.K. based staff writer at Live Science. He covers physics and astronomy, among other topics like tech and climate change. He graduated from University College London with a degree in particle physics before training as a journalist.

Scientists have observed like charges attracting each other over long distances in an apparent contradiction of a fundamental principle of physics.

"Because like-charged objects in a vacuum are expected to repel regardless of whether the sign of the charge they carry is positive or negative, the expectation is that like-charged particles in solution must also monotonically repel," the researchers wrote in the paper. To explain the strange behavior, the researchers turned to a theory they had been developed that modeled the water as molecular rather than as a continuous medium.

This force reduces the overall energy in the system after a proton has"hopped" onto the silica particles to decrease their overall negative charge, and it occurs at a distinct pH range when the protons in the solution are able to switch their positions.—Otherworldly 'time crystal' made inside Google quantum computer could change physics forever"You need to be in a range of pH where the protons want to hop on and off," Krishnan said.

 

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