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Naturally Occurring Quasicrystals

55 pointsby lukeplatolast Thursday at 2:32 PM5 commentsview on HN

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jryiotoday at 12:59 AM

If you haven't already, read the book "The Second Kind of Impossible" by Paul Steinhardt

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/35297608-the-second-kind...

It's a riveting account of years of research to discover Quasicrytals from theory, to experiments, to literally hunting in a meteor field in eastern Russia!

jumploopsyesterday at 11:54 PM

Related, if you're interested in byproducts of nuclear explosions:

> researchers have identified a new material within trinitite called a clathrate—a cagelike chemical lattice that traps other atoms inside it.[0]

[0]https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/strange-crystals-...

zeusdclxvitoday at 12:17 AM

There was a mathematician and a chemist arguing these structures had a pattern that had something to do with the distribution of prime numbers. https://www.quantamagazine.org/a-chemist-shines-light-on-a-s...

fgfarbentoday at 12:36 AM

There are also "natural" paracrystalline viruses that turn isopods blue and then kill them.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invertebrate_iridescent_virus_...

Nzenyesterday at 11:46 PM

tl;dr Quasicrystals are aperiodic structures. The author notes that the conditions for creating them are rare, given the need for instantaneous high temperature. They recount that these can happen during space debris impact and when lightning hits sand. They close out by describing some of the chemical 'formulas' for these materials, given that characterizing a prototypical section is difficult without repeating elements.

I don't have anything to say about quasicrystals, other than it seems right up this blog's alley, as the other most recent articles are about math and materials (like feldspars [0]).

[0] https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php/2501:_Average_Fam...

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