Uhhhhh, as trustworthy as the source may or may not be (I have no idea who controls that account), I feel like such strong statements should directly reference strong evidence. I don't see any evidence supplied, only a very strong statement:
With a great deal of sadness, we now believe that the game is over. LK99 is NOT a superconductor, not even at room temperatures (or at very low temperatures). It is a very highly resistive poor quality material. Period. No point in fighting with the truth. Data have spoken.
You may not have seen it but the tweet is part of a thread. The thread mentions exactly the data you ask for.
And, you may not have seen it but the account is that of the condensed matter theory center at the university of Maryland. The people working there are at https://www.physics.umd.edu/cmtc/people.html .
Anyone has a link to some communication from the university of Maryland which is not written by a teenager? They must be one if they spent time trying to reproduce the material.
> I feel like such strong statements should directly reference strong evidence
That's not the way the burden of proof goes! Consider "Fluoride Toothpaste is not a Superconductor".
What you want is conspiracy logic: assume something interesting is probably true based on weak evidence (a handful of videos on twitter seems like table stakes in this particular controversy), and then when people deny it you demand that it "should directly reference strong evidence".
This is a naive view of the burden of proof. The reality is that anyone that actually cares already knows the situation: we are waiting on reproductions. This Tweet pretty clearly implies that there’s been some sort of new insight. That’s the obvious and intended plain language effect it’s having. Ham-fistedly applying “burden of proof!” Is just being tone deaf.
> The reality is that anyone that actually cares already knows the situation: we are waiting on reproductions.
No, the reality is we're not getting reproductions. You're doing the same thing the upthread poster is and demanding that in the absence of evidence, we believe the most interesting assertion. But no, that's not how it works, and that's what the tweet is trying to tell you. It only seems "tone deaf" if you're invested in the argument.
There is a difference between saying "We believe LK-99 is NOT a superconductor" and "We do not believe LK-99 is a superconductor". The former is a hypothesis, the latter is a rejection of a hypothesis. The latter is really just expressing a return to an agnostic base state. Hence, the former requires evidence, and the latter is the null hypothesis.
The grandparent was demanding data and evidence to argue about the status of superconduction in a real material. What you wrote is just a semantic argument.[1]
And you're right. But you're not telling us anything about LK-99. If you want to tell me that the linked tweet is a little hyperbolic and could be stated more rigorously, I'd agree! But we both know that's not the frame of the comment I was responding to. The upthread posters "wants to believe", and is looking for reasons to reject the tweet's opinion, not its language.
[1] Which, notably, ignored my toothpaste analogy.
> To conclude, we have observed a semiconductor-like, non-superconducting electric property in our LK-99-like synthetic samples, along with diamagnetic and soft-ferromagnetic properties arising from supposedly different phases of the mixed product. Our results suggest that one needs to be cautious when interpreting half-levitation observations as evidence for net levitating forces (and, further, as evidence for the Meissner effect). The presence of ferromagnetism in a Pb-Cu-P-O system is somewhat unexpected, as we are not aware of previous reports of materials with related properties. The presence of a flat-bandlike electronic structure in Pb10−xCux(PO4)6O, as revealed in a recent calculation [14, 18], might be able to give rise to such spontaneous ferromagnetism, which warrants further investigation.
So, they replicated the "half levitation" effect and found it had nothing to do with superconductivity. Little chunks of it have ferromagnetic and diamagnetic properties along with it being a semiconductor. Weird, but no evidence at all of superconductivity.
Doesn't explain the videos of fully levitating samples, but those are easily faked and none of them have been very plausible and could just be attention seeking or attempts to manipulate stock markets.
Still should get replicated and those questions that the arxiv preprint raise should really get investigated and answered, but it pretty strongly looks like we're investigating a novel semiconductor now, not a superconductor.
Why is not the initial claim a strong statement? And if the strong evidence supplied is the method to reproduce and no one can reproduce, then that should be evidence that their evidence is lacking and therefore their original claim is suspect.
Until someone can reliably reproduce the claims of LK99, it remains speculation.
There's a study by the authors? I mean if they just said that I was a hoax by the authors that'd be one thing, but they did specifically mention the data has spoken so...
Twitter no longer provides context unless you're logged in. You can currently view a single tweet if directly linked, but not the surrounding thread or replies.
Probably not accounts trying to tip the market. Pay no attention to social media these days. Pay only slight attention to scientific articles. Pay more attention to preprints knowing they are preprints.
This isn't the first unprofessional message from that Twitter account during the lk99 saga. Their biased tone makes them untrustworthy. Even more than anime girl et al
They're citing a study from the International Center for Quantum Materials at Peking University in Beijing (which has several Alumni from the Condensed Matter Theory Center at U of Maryland which is the twitter account) which goes into the matter in some depth and finds that chunks of the material are ferromagnetic and some chunks are diamagnetic and the whole thing is a semiconductor. They also replicate the half-levitation effect from the original video and which some people have replicated:
> Strong language doesn't usually correlate with qualification.
I never asserted the converse.
Pointing out that strong, biased language can be associated with expertise and therefore in isolation has no bearing on truth, isn't the same as saying that strong, biased language is always associated with expertise.
In fact I just argued that strong, biased language associated with ignorance is generally bad, and is much worse than biased language coming from experts.
> They sprouted the same harsh tone badmouthing video streaming a couple of days ago.
Depending on what they were saying, I might agree with them that they have a point, that statement is rather vague. The video streaming of LK-99 synthesis turned out to be not very useful or enlightening in the end. It settled nothing and created a spectacle--people felt more informed that they could watch it, but at the end of the day they weren't better informed. The preprint from ICQM looks fairly definitive.
But do they claim to be an expert in video streaming? Probably not. Which means how you view their opinions on the two different subjects -- video streaming and superconductivity -- can and should be different.
> Being an expert and being biased on purpose implies acting in bad faith.
That doesn't even make any sense to me. Like I don't know what to say because I can't understand what you could possibly be trying to say.
It sounds like you're struggling hard to create a world where experts need to just shut up while ignorant people get to post whatever hottakes they like. That seems to obviously result in a dystopia of information to me.
> Being biased due to ignorance is not a big deal since in principle no one is going to pay you attention anyway.
Well that's clearly false, since we just watched in real time all kinds of strong hottakes from people who had spent the weekend researching superconductors on wikipedia getting wildly upvoted here and on twitter because people wanted to believe.
IMO that is actually bad because that is how you can delude people and how propaganda can manipulate a population.
It's a tweet, the more carefully worded stuff is in scientific papers. I don't mind. The scientists can be colloquial on twitter if they're formal in the papers, like how pop science can turn "we have detected these wavelengths in a handful of photons from this point in space" into "EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE DISCOVERED IN BLUE GOLDILOCKS ZONE EXOPLANET"
If it's proven that LK-99 is NOT a superconductor, will still have any "real use"? Or it's going to be completely worthless. Is it "dihcotomic"? Either it's a superconductor and it's helpful for humanity, or it's not and it's completely worthless. Or being "enough" good of a conductor might have applications as well?
Contrary to the linked tweet, there's some reason to think its diagmagnetism is pretty interesting. It might be the second most diamagnetic non-superconductive material known. Why this may happen may keep condensed matter physicists entertained for a while. Very little chance of direct technologicalapplications for the foreseeable future, though.
If this were true, would CMTC word the tweet like this:
> Enquiring minds want to know: Is diamagnetism not interesting? The answer is that NO, diamagnetism is NOT interesting, many materials (e.g. Pb, Cu, P going into LK99) are diamagnetic. It is a run of the mill property. (There are more results, but CMTC cannot divulge them yet.)
In previous threads I read that this material is very tricky to make, that nobody has succeeded in making a pure sample, and therefore we should expect many negative results and that they don't necessarily mean anything conclusive.
What's different here is that this sample is exhibiting some of the properties that a successful sample would, indicating that this is not an outright dud. They also seem to have an explanation for why/how they might observe those properties but not superconductivity.
This is in contrast to someone claiming their sample did not exhibit any of the properties of LK-99 at all.
But that's not enough, because this sample alone doesn't explain the extreme variability of other samples. This conclusion is only possible under the assumption that all other samples are bad or incorrectly measured---a highly unlikely event.
In particular they were needlessly critical of Southeast University before [1], which reported the increasing resistance up to ~230 K, then a sudden drop til ~255 K, then back to the normalish curve. I previously criticised that the purported "zero resistance" below ~110 K is misleading, while I was unsure about the drop, but at least it does show the completely opposite trend to the PKU result and CMTC should have explained (or refuted) this as well.
What really annoys me is that we have not seen a single reproduction of LK-99 yet.
A lot of the arxiv papers will measure PXRD. Then they will say stuff like "the position of the peaks is almost identical" (https://arxiv.org/pdf/2308.03110.pdf) (emphasis is mine).
Anyone who knows anything about diffraction knows that almost identical means different.
The original paper specified that LK-99 requires a 0.48% contraction of the unit cell volume. if you are off by a small fraction (either from over- or under-doping) the sample is not LK-99. it is something different.
so far all "reproduction" papers have stated that they created the wrong material, then gone on to show that it does not behave as a superconductor.
I'm not saying that LK-99 is definitely a room temperature superconductor, only that I have not seen a single reproduction attempt actually report the same unit cell parameters as reported by the original paper. Thus not a single reproduction attempt has thus far reproduced LK-99.
Science is like that. The problem is not with science or with this material not being super-conducting. The problem is with how science is explained in media. Failing to test hypothesis is a critical step in the scientific method.
It's important that public understand the difference between a preprint in arXiv, a paper in a serious peer review journal and the truth.
We've seen a lot of miracle cures during the covid-19 epidemic where all the support was a bunch of preprints (and some of the preprints were horrible, I read a few of them to write angry comments in HN).
A paper in a serious peer review journal (if possible/relevant preregistered and with a randomized controlled group) is much better evidence, but it still can be wrong.
IF the game is over, shouldn't arbitrage be possible between these various markets? I guess the timeline is very long for these bets and time is opportunity.
The prediction markets still give a 25% chance of it being an SC at room temperature?
Prediction markets are just uninformed gambling? They don't mean anything if the money is from people with low information? Don't rely on a prediction market to predict validity of a supposed scientific breakthrough?
I think this was overall positive as a social phenomenon. It did not result in a superconductor future, but it got a lot of people interested in science and practical experiments. The biggest cost was several labs doing work they wouldn't have done otherwise. And that seems fairly minor when compared to the cultural exposure that their work received.
It's unfortunate that it probably won't work out. But this was fun. Good story, good experience.
This whole saga has still been thoroughly exhilarating and compelling. The sort of stuff that in the past might have nudged young people into the sciences.
I've been using the prediction market https://manifold.markets/QuantumObserver/will-the-lk99-room-... as a way to track consensus opinion without having the expertise myself. It's currently near 20%, down from 30% in the last day. So we're not quite at the 'game over' phase.
Definitely not. This definitely sounds like recency bias. I'll bet 9/10 of your non hacker / engineering family/friends don't even know what LK-99 is. I know thats the case for me at least.
To use a word like hoax would require at least some hint of the authors falsifying data or intentionally misrepresenting things. LK-99 is still very magnetically interesting even if it is not a superconductor. Interpreting those interesting behaviors is where things seem to have gone wrong.
With a great deal of sadness, we now believe that the game is over. LK99 is NOT a superconductor, not even at room temperatures (or at very low temperatures). It is a very highly resistive poor quality material. Period. No point in fighting with the truth. Data have spoken.
What data?????