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Ultrafast X‑Ray Lasers Pinpoint Hybrid Structure in Superionic Water

Researchers captured femtosecond snapshots at million‑atmosphere pressures to resolve oxygen stacking that could guide studies of ice‑giant interiors.

Overview

  • Experiments at European XFEL and SLAC’s LCLS produced superionic water and recorded its atomic arrangement within trillionths of a second.
  • Measurements show a mixed oxygen lattice combining face‑centered cubic regions with hexagonal close‑packed layers, creating pervasive stacking faults.
  • The phase features mobile hydrogen ions moving through a fixed oxygen framework, yielding high electrical conductivity relevant to planetary magnetism.
  • Authors note it remains unclear whether the observed disorder is intrinsic to the phase or introduced by shock compression, prompting follow‑up tests.
  • Findings, published in Nature Communications by a team of more than 60 researchers, provide constraints for models of Uranus, Neptune and similar exoplanets.