Rocking the thermometer at 4 trillion degrees Celsius, a subatomic soup that might reflect the state of matter shortly after the Big Bang has set a new world record: It’s the hottest substance ever created in a lab. The previous record, recorded at Sandia National Lab in 2006, was a balmy 2 billion degrees Celsius. The core of the sun burns at a chill 15 million degrees.
The uber-hot brew is created at Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island. The lab’s Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, RHIC, accelerates gold particles to nearly the speed of light before slamming them together to see what they’re made of. When the energy of the colliding gold particles is transferred into heat, the temperature soars. Scientists with the Pioneering High Energy Nuclear Interaction eXperiment, PHENIX, who took the temperature measurement, announced a value of 4 trillion, but that’s only an average over the lifetime of the substance. At its hottest stage, the infusion may reach 7 trillion degrees Celsius.
“Matter as we know it shouldn’t exist at that temperature,” says PHENIX Spokesperson Barbara Jacak. And from what they can tell, it doesn’t really.