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Also, since plasma is the fourth state of matter, is there a fifth? In other words, if you heat up plasma even more, what is the next big phase transition that the atoms would undergo? Would nuclear fission occur if matter was heated to extremely high temperatures?

Posted
Also, since plasma is the fourth state of matter, is there a fifth? In other words, if you heat up plasma even more, what is the next big phase transition that the atoms would undergo? Would nuclear fission occur if matter was heated to extremely high temperatures?

 

There are other forms of matter, like Bose-Enstien condensate.

Posted

from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/States_of_matter

The most familiar examples of phases are solids, liquids, and gases. Less familiar phases include plasmas and quark-gluon plasmas, Bose-Einstein condensates and fermionic condensates, strange matter, liquid crystals, superfluids and supersolids and the paramagnetic and ferromagnetic phases of magnetic materials.

 

:eek: That's a lot more than high school teaches. When would one learn about these different phases in university, and what courses are they usually in, chemistry or physics?

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