The Fourth State of Matter
There are three classic states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas; however, plasma is considered by some scientists to be the fourth state of matter.
The plasma state is not related to blood plasma, the most common usage of the word; rather, the term has been used in physics since the 1920s to represent an ionized gas.
Lightning is commonly seen as a form of plasma.
Plasma is found in both ordinary and exotic places.
When an electric current is passed through neon gas, it produces both plasma and light.
Lightning is a massive electrical discharge in the atmosphere that creates a jagged column of plasma.
Part of a comet's streaming tail is plasma from gas ionized by sunlight and other unknown processes.
The Sun is a 1.5-millionkilometer ball of plasma. It is heated by nuclear fusion.
Scientists study plasma for practical purposes.
In an effort to harness fusion energy on Earth, physicists are studying devices that create and confine very hot plasmas in magnetic fields.
In space, plasma processes are largely responsible for shielding Earth from cosmic radiation, and much of the Sun's influence on Earth occurs by energy transfer through the ionized layers of the upper atmosphere.