Critical opalescence is a phenomenon which arises in the region of a continuous, or second-order,
phase transition. Originally reported by
Thomas Andrews in 1869 for the liquid-gas transition in
carbon dioxide, many other examples have been discovered since. The phenomenon is most commonly demonstrated in binary fluid mixtures, such as methanol and cyclohexane. As the
critical point is approached the sizes of the gas and liquid region begin to fluctuate over increasingly large length scales. As the density fluctuations become of a size comparable to the wavelength of light, the light is scattered and causes the normally
transparent fluid to appear cloudy. Tellingly, the
opalescence does not diminish as one gets closer to the critical point, where the largest fluctuations can reach even centimetre proportions, confirming the physical relevance of smaller fluctuations.
In 1908 the Polish physicist Marian Smoluchowski became the first to ascribe the phenomenon of critical opalescence to large density fluctuations. In 1920 Albert Einstein showed that the link between critical opalescence and Rayleigh scattering is quantitative.
External links
More-detailed experimental demonstrations of critical opalescence may be found at
- http://physicsofmatter.com/NotTheBook/CriticalOpal/Explanation.html
- http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uccaata/work/opalescence/opalescence.html
- http://www.msm.cam.ac.uk/doitpoms/tlplib/solid-solutions/demo.php