Exotic "second sound" phenomenon observed in pencil lead

Researchers find evidence that heat moves through graphite similar to the way so
Researchers find evidence that heat moves through graphite similar to the way sound moves through air. Image: Christine Daniloff
At relatively balmy temperatures, heat behaves like sound when moving through graphite, study reports. The next time you set a kettle to boil, consider this scenario: After turning the burner off, instead of staying hot and slowly warming the surrounding kitchen and stove, the kettle quickly cools to room temperature and its heat hurtles away in the form of a boiling-hot wave. We know heat doesn't behave this way in our day-to-day surroundings. But now MIT researchers have observed this seemingly implausible mode of heat transport, known as "second sound," in a rather commonplace material: graphite - the stuff of pencil lead. At temperatures of 120 kelvin, or -240 degrees Fahrenheit, they saw clear signs that heat can travel through graphite in a wavelike motion. Points that were originally warm are left instantly cold, as the heat moves across the material at close to the speed of sound. The behavior resembles the wavelike way in which sound travels through air, so scientists have dubbed this exotic mode of heat transport "second sound."   The new results represent the highest temperature at which scientists have observed second sound.
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