Today's article is perhaps not a "fake" in itself, but it retroactively qualifies a lot of prior work as fake.
Scientists have apparently just discovered a new form of magnetism:
Altermagnetism: A new type of magnetism, with broad implications for technology and research
Altermagnets have a special combination of the arrangement of spins and crystal symmetries. The spins alternate, as in antiferromagnets, resulting in no net magnetization. Yet, rather than simply canceling out, the symmetries give an electronic band structure with strong spin polarization that flips in direction as you pass through the material's energy bands—hence the name altermagnets. This results in highly useful properties more resemblant to ferromagnets, as well as some completely new properties.
My understanding of the difference between Maxwell's equations, as written in their original quaternion notation, and Heaviside's "translation" of them into conventional notation, is that the Heaviside equations treat opposite vectors as canceled-out zeroes and discard them, whereas the original equations somehow kept this polarity. Here we see something similar, if I'm not mistaken: the opposing vectors cancel out upon first inspection, but on another level, unseen until now, their polarity also generates a subtle surplus phenomenon. Einstein did NOT know Maxwell's original equations, only Heaviside's reduced versions, and apparently this is common.
"That's the magic about altermagnets," says Tomáš Jungwirth from the Institute of Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, principal investigator of the study. "Something that people believed was impossible until recent theoretical predictions [showed it] is in fact possible."
Here we encounter once again the weird epistemological blind spot at the heart of institutional science. Scientists seem incapable of stopping themselves from decreeing things "impossible" in advance because the mathemagic told them so. What arrogance. And then one day,
oops...uh actually there's another form of magnetism we never saw because the equations told us it was impossible, please forget we ever said that. But this time we really know what's impossible, trust us! They're no better than the economists with their worthless Nobel Prizes. I call it the neurotic fantasy of epistemological closure, and scientists, who ought to be the last people to fall for it, seem, thanks some uncanny constitutional short-circuit between their professed ideals and their obsessional personality types/emotional needs, inevitably to begin to believe that even if they don't know everything, at least they know more or less where the line between possible and impossible lies. Pure hubris!
Murmurings that a new type of magnetism was lurking began not long ago: In 2019, Jungwirth together with theoretical colleagues at the Czech Academy of Sciences and University of Mainz identified a class of magnetic materials with a spin structure that did not fit within the classic descriptions of ferromagnetism or antiferromagnetism.
"Altermagnetism is actually not something hugely complicated. It is something entirely fundamental that was in front of our eyes for decades without noticing it," says Jungwirth. "And it is not something that exists only in a few obscure materials. It exists in many crystals that people simply had in their drawers.
Not "decades"...forever.
So how many other mysterious properties do those household crystals possess? How many other "fundamental" forces and processes that were "right in front of our eyes" are today dismissed as impossible on prima facie grounds by the same arrogant science scum who claimed they knew everything there was to know about magnetism?