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opal

  (ō'pəl) pronunciation
n.
  1. A mineral of hydrated silica.
  2. A gemstone made of this mineral, noted for its rich iridescence.

[Middle English opalus, from Latin, alteration of Greek opallios, probably from Sanskrit upalaḥ, from variant of upara-, lower, from upa, below.]

opaline o'pal·ine' (ō'pə-līn', -lēn') adj.
 
 

A natural hydrated form of silica. Opal is a relatively common mineral in its nongem form, which is known as common opal and lacks the play of color for which gem, or precious, opal is known. All opal is of relatively simple chemical composition, SiO2 · nH2O. The hardness of opal on the Mohs hardness scale ranges from 5 to 6, the specific gravity from 2.25 to 1.99, and the refractive index from 1.455 to 1.435. See also Hardness scales; Silicate minerals.

The color of common opal ranges from transparent, glassy, and colorless to white and bluish white. Common pigmenting agents, such as iron, produce yellow, brown, red, and green colors, and frequently several colors in a single specimen. Precious opal has a play of color that is the result of white light being diffracted by the relatively regular internal array of silica spheres. Because opal is a hydrous mineral, certain opals from specific geologic occurrences may crack because of water loss. Therefore, considerable care is required in the polishing and handling of opal.

Several trade terms are used to describe the appearance of precious opal based on transparency, body color, and the type of play of color. Some of these terms are black opal, which is translucent to almost opaque, with dark gray to black body color, with play of color; fire opal, which is transparent to semitransparent, with yellow, orange, red, or brown body color and with or without play of color; harlequin or mosaic opal, in which the play of color occurs in distinct, broad, angular patches; and matrix opal, which consists of thin seams of high-quality gem opal in a matrix. See also Gem.


 

The original name of software from Computer Associates that converts legacy output from mainframes and minicomputers into a graphical-based format. Now part of their Advantage Integration Server suite, the technology provides the development environment and supports 3270, 5250 and VT220 terminals and ODBC-compliant databases. Development can be done by drag and drop or by scripting in OpalScript or VBScript. A Telnet connection to the mainframe is provided and maintains a connection to the desktop allowing the Web browser or a Windows client with the software to have access to the newly formatted data. See green screen.

From Green Screen to the Web
Advantage Integration Server (formerly Opal) transforms legacy applications (top) into graphics-based documents (bottom) that can be accessed via a Web browser or Windows client software.



 

Black opal from Australia; in the collection of the Department of Earth Sciences, Washington …
(click to enlarge)
Black opal from Australia; in the collection of the Department of Earth Sciences, Washington … (credit: John H. Gerard)
A hydrated, noncrystalline silica mineral used extensively as a gemstone. Its chemical composition is similar to that of quartz but generally with a variable water content. Pure opal is colourless, but impurities generally give it various dull colours ranging from yellow and red to black. Black opal is especially rare and valuable. White opal and fire opal, characterized by yellow, orange, or red colour, are much more common. Various forms of common opal are widely used as abrasives, insulation material, and ceramic ingredients. Opal is most abundant in volcanic rocks, especially in areas of hot-spring activity. The finest gem opals have been found in Australia; other areas that yield gem material include Japan, Mexico, Honduras, India, New Zealand, and the U.S.

For more information on opal, visit Britannica.com.

 

A hydrous form of silica containing 2 to 10% combined water; reacts with cement alkalies and may be highly detrimental as an aggregate in concrete.


 
(ō'pəl) , a mineral consisting of poorly crystalline to amorphous silica, SiO2·nH2O; the water content is quite variable but usually ranges from 3% to 10%. Common opal is usually colorless or white, but it may be gray, brown, yellow, or red; the color is due to fine-grained impurities. Opal is formed at low temperatures from silica-bearing waters and can occur in fissures and cavities of any rock type. Precious, or gem, opal has a rich iridescence and remarkable play of changing colors, usually in red, green, and blue. This is the result of a specific internal structure consisting of regularly packed uniform spheres of amorphous silica a few tenths of a micron in diameter; sphere diameter and refractive index determine the range of colors displayed. The greater part of the world's supply of precious opal comes from the Coober Pedy and Andamooka fields in South Australia. The original source, known in Roman times, was in what is now E Slovakia. Precious opal has also been mined in Honduras, Mexico, and the Virgin Valley in Nevada. Fire opal is a bright red transparent or translucent opal that may or may not show a play of color.


 

SiO
Amorphous

Environment

In gas holes in fresh volcanics, deposits from hot springs, and in sediments, as poikilitic units enclosing sand or replacing fossils.

Crystal description

There are two types, common opal and precious opal. Common opal is amorphous, therefore not in crystals except as pseudomorphs of others. Can be colorless (hyalite) or colored blue, green, red, or yellow by impurities; in amygdules, veins, and seams; also botryoidal, reniform, stalactitic. Commonly pseudomorphous after wood, shells, or bone. Precious opal is transparent material with a play of color. Electron microscope photographs of precious opal reveal a regimented structure that explains the fire. Silica, having flocculated into tiny, uniformly sized and perfectly aligned spheres, creates a microgrooved effect, like that on a compact disc, and the rulings in a diffraction grating, to create a color play of reflected light.

Physical properties

Colorless or with all light tints; also with rainbow play of color. Luster glassy to resinous; hardness 5-6; specific gravity 1.9-2.2; fracture conchoidal. Rather fragile and brittle; tending to lose water and crack; transparent to translucent; often highly fluorescent (yellow-green), from uranium impurities.

Composition

Silicon dioxide, like quartz, but with water to 10%.

Tests

Infusible and insoluble, but gives water in closed tube upon intense ignition; usually decrepitates in flame, may whiten. Distinguished from chalcedony by the shiny fracture surface.

Distinguishing characteristics

Broken fragment might be confused with quartz, but opal's lesser hardness is a good guide. Fluorescence frequent (when uranium is present).

Occurrence

One of the varieties of opal, the variety characterized by a play of rainbow colors in what is essentially clear material, is known as precious opal and is a valuable jewelry stone. Fire opal is the name given red-orange transparent common opal, often faceted and associated with precious opal in Mexico. Common opal has no particular value, though it is often highly fluorescent and collected for that reason.

There are many occurrences of opal deposited from hot water, as in the hot spring terraces and steaming geyser chimneys of Yellowstone National Park. A light yellow altered wood occurs in Virgin Valley, Nevada, together with precious opal log replacements. Diatomaceous earth is made from the fossil external skeletons of microscopic plants. Precious opal was found in volcanic rocks in the first known occurrence, in Czechoslovakia, and later in Idaho and California, and preeminently in the Querétaro district of Mexico. Of greater value, however, are the opals of the sedimentary rocks of e. Australia, which at many different places yield numerous types of precious opal. It is found in concretions and in cracks and crevices in soft sediments, and often in Queensland as opalized fossils. It occurs on seams in clay-iron stone boulder opal. An opal-cemented white quartzite from Australia is commonly dyed to resemble black opal. Similar material has lately been found at some depth in Louisiana. There is an occurrence of a fairly hard white precious opal in Brazil, at Dom Pedro II, Ceará. Colorless to blue hyalite is common on seams in pegmatites in the Spruce Pine district, North Carolina. Glassy hyalite droplets in Oregon and Mexican rhyolite pockets resemble masses of frog eggs, as do oolitic opal concretions around a hot spring in Japan, each enclosing a tiny central speck.



 
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Olive Plantations Of Australia LtdBusiness->Firms
Online Performance And LearningCommunity->Educational
Opal Technologies, Inc.Business->NASDAQ Symbols
Open Program Access LicenseComputing->Software
Orbiting Picosat Automated LauncherGovernmental->Military
Orbiting Picosatellite Automated LauncherGovernmental->NASA
Outstanding Philanthropic Award For LeadershipMiscellaneous->Awards & Medals

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Wikipedia: opal


Opal
Opal_Armband_800pix.jpg
An opal bracelet. The stone size is 18 by 15 mm (0.7 by 0.6 inch).
General
Category Mineraloid
Chemical formula Hydrated silica. SiO2·nH2O
Identification
Color White, black, red, orange, most of the full spectrum, colorless, iridescent. Very infrequently of a singular color
Crystal habit Irregular veins, in masses, in nodules
Crystal system Amorphous[1]
Cleavage None[1]
Fracture Conchoidal to uneven[1]
Mohs Scale hardness 5.5–6.5[1]
Luster Subvitreous to waxy[1]
Polish luster Vitreous to resinous[1]
Refractive index 1.450 (+.020, -.080) Mexican Opal may read as low as 1.37, but typically reads 1.42–1.43[1]
Optical Properties Single refractive, often anomalous double refractive due to strain[1]
Birefringence none[1]
Pleochroism None[1]
Ultraviolet fluorescence black or white body color: inert to white to moderate light blue, green, or yellow in long and short wave. May also phosphoresce; common opal: inert to strong green or yellowish green in long and short wave, may phosphoresce; fire opal: inert to moderate greenish brown in long and short wave, may phosphoresce.[1]
Absorption spectra green stones: 660nm, 470nm cutoff[1]
Streak White
Specific gravity 2.15 (+.08, -.90)[1]
Diagnostic Features darkening upon heating
Solubility hot saltwater, bases, methanol, humic acid, hydrofluoric acid
Diaphaneity opaque, translucent, transparent

The mineraloid opal is amorphous SiO2·nH2O, hydrated silicon dioxide, the water content sometimes being as high as 20% but is usually between three and ten percent. Opal ranges from clear through white, gray, red, yellow, green, shore, blue, magenta, brown, and black. Of these hues, red and black are the most rare and dear, whereas white and green are the most common; these are a function of growth size into the red and infrared wavelengths—see precious opal. Common opal is truly amorphous, but precious opal does have a structural element. The word opal comes from the Latin opalus, by Greek òpalliòs, and is from the same root as Sanskrit upálá[s] for "stone", originally a millstone with upárá[s] for slab.[2] (see Upal). Opals are also Australia's national gemstone.

Opal is a mineraloid gel which is deposited at relatively low temperature and may occur in the fissures of almost any kind of rock, being most commonly found with limonite, sandstone, rhyolite, and basalt.

Opal is one of the mineraloids that can form or replace fossils. The resulting fossils, though not of any extra scientific interest, appeal to collectors.

Precious opal

Precious opal shows a variable interplay of internal colors and does have an internal structure. At the micro scale precious opal is composed of silica spheres some 150 to 300 nm in diameter in a hexagonal or cubic closed-packed lattice. These ordered silica spheres produce the internal colors by causing the interference and diffraction of light passing through the microstructure of opal (Klein and Hurlbut, 1985, p. 444). It is the regularity of the sizes of the spheres, and of the packing of these spheres that determines the quality of precious opal. Where the distance between the regularly packed planes of spheres is approximately half the wavelength of a component of visible light, the light of that wavelength may be subject to diffraction from the grating created by the stacked planes. The spacing between the planes and the orientation of planes with respect to the incident light determines the colors observed. The process can be described by Bragg's Law of diffraction. Visible light of diffracted wavelengths cannot pass through large thicknesses of the opal. This is the basis of the optical band gap in a photonic crystal, of which opal is the best known natural example.

Precious opal consists of spheres of silica of fairly regular size, packed into close-packed planes which are stacked together with characteristic dimensions of several hundred nm.
Enlarge
Precious opal consists of spheres of silica of fairly regular size, packed into close-packed planes which are stacked together with characteristic dimensions of several hundred nm.

In addition, microfractures may be filled with secondary silica and form thin lamellae inside the opal during solidification. The term opalescence is commonly and erroneously used to describe this unique and beautiful phenomenon, which is correctly termed play of color. Contrarily, opalescence is correctly applied to the milky, turbid appearance of common or potch opal. Potch does not show a play of color.

The veins of opal displaying the play of color are often quite thin, and this has given rise to unusual methods of preparing the stone as a gem. An opal doublet is a thin layer of colorful material, backed by a black mineral, such as ironstone, basalt or obsidian. The darker backing emphasizes the play of color, and results in a more attractive display than a lighter potch. Given the texture of opals, they can be quite difficult to polish to a reasonable lustre. The triplet cut backs the colored material with a dark backing, and then has a domed cap of clear quartz (rock crystal) or plastic on top, which takes a high polish, and acts as a protective layer for the opal. Opal doublets and triplets are not classed as precious opal.

Common opal

Besides the gemstone varieties that show a play of color, there are other kinds of common opal such as the milk opal, milky bluish to greenish (which can sometimes be of gemstone quality); resin opal, honey-yellow with a resinous lustre; wood opal, caused by the replacement of the organic material in wood with opal; menilite brown or grey; hyalite, a colorless glass-clear opal sometimes called Muller's Glass; geyserite, (siliceous sinter) deposited around hot springs or geysers; and diatomite or diatomaceous earth, the accumulations of diatom shells or tests.

Other varieties of opal

Fire opal, or Girasol, is a translucent to semi-opaque stone that is generally yellow to bright orange and sometimes nearly red and displays pleochroism at certain angles.

Peruvian opal (also called blue opal) is a semi-opaque to opaque blue-green stone found in Peru which is often cut to include the matrix in the more opaque stones. It does not display pleochroism.

Boulder opal carving of a walrus, showing flashes of color from the exposed opal. The carving is 9 cm (3.5 inches) long.
Enlarge
Boulder opal carving of a walrus, showing flashes of color from the exposed opal. The carving is 9 cm (3.5 inches) long.

Sources of opal

Until the nineteenth century the only source of precious opal known to Europeans was the mining district of Červenica in Slovakia.

Opal without play of color is very common and can be found all over the world, unlike precious opal deposits that are in greater scope found today only in Australia, U.S. and Mexico.

Australia produces around 97% of the world’s opal. 90% is called ‘light opal’ or white and crystal opal. White makes up 60% but not all the opal fields produce white opal; Crystal opal or pure hydrated silica makes up 30%; 8% is black and only 2% is boulder opal.

The town of Coober Pedy in South Australia is a major source of opal. Another Australian town, Lightning Ridge in New South Wales, is the main source of black opal, opal containing a predominantly dark background (dark-gray to blue-black displaying the play of color). Boulder opal consists of concretions and fracture fillings in a dark siliceous ironstone matrix. It is found sporadically in western Queensland, from Kynuna in the north, to Yowah and Koroit in the south.[3]

Multi-color rough opal specimen from Virgin Valley, Nevada, USA
Enlarge
Multi-color rough opal specimen from Virgin Valley, Nevada, USA

Fire opal is found mostly in Mexico and Mesoamerica. In South America opal discovered in 1930 in a city called Pedro II in Brazil is still produced. In Honduras there was also some fine black opal mined from volcanic ash deposits. This opal is known for its stability.[citation needed]

The Virgin Valley Opal Fields Of Humboldt County in Northern Nevada produce a wide variety black, crystal, white, and fire opal.The Fire Opal mined from this locality is designated as the official gemstone of the State of Nevada. Most precious opals are wood replacements. Many specimens have a high water content, and as a result, have a greater tendency to desiccate and crack than most precious opal. Discovered in 1904 the mines are still producing gem materials in large amounts to hundreds of seasonal visitors. Three Fee Dig Mines provide the general public an opportunity to dig the gems themselves. The largest black opal in the Smithsonian Museum, possibly worth in excess of $1 million, comes from the Royal Peacock Opal Mine in the Virgin Valley.

Another source of white base opal in the United States is Spencer, Idaho. A high percentage of the opal found there occurs in thin layers. As a result, most of the production goes into the making of doublets and triplets.

Other significant deposits of precious opal around the world can be found in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Turkey, Indonesia, Brazil, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Ethiopia.

Synthetic opal

As well as occurring naturally, opals of all varieties have been synthesized experimentally and commercially. The discovery of the ordered sphere structure of precious opal led to its synthesis by Pierre Gilson in 1974 (Klein and Hurlbut, 1985, p.528). The resulting material is distinguishable from natural opal by its regularity; under magnification, the patches of color are seen to be arranged in a "lizard skin" or "chicken wire" pattern. Synthetics are further distinguished from naturals by the former's lack of fluorescence under UV light. Synthetics are also generally lower in density and are often highly porous; some may even stick to the tongue.

Two notable producers of synthetic opal are the companies Kyocera and Inamori of Japan. Most so-called synthetics, however, are more correctly termed imitations, as they contain substances not found in natural opal (e.g., plastic stabilizers). The imitation opals seen in vintage jewellery are often "Slocum Stone" consisting of laminated glass with bits of foil interspersed.

The Hamamatsu Photonics Group will utilise the International Space Station's Japanese Experiment Module in 2006 to grow perfect crystalline opals in microgravity over four months, as compared with five million years for naturals. Such opals will be the object of study and elements for optical filters, displays, and data storage.[4][5]

Local atomic structure of opals

The lattice of spheres of opal that cause the interference with light are several hundred times larger than the fundamental structure of crystalline silica. As a mineraloid, there is no unit cell that describes the structure of opal. Nevertheless, opals can be roughly divided into those that have show no signs of crystalline order, i.e., amorphous opal, and those that show signs of the beginning of crystalline order, commonly termed cryptocrystalline or microcrystalline opal (Graetsch, 1994). Dehydration experiments and infrared spectroscopy have shown that most of the H2O in the formula of SiO2.nH2O of opals is present in the familiar form of clusters of molecular water. Isolated water molecules, and silanols, structures such as Si-O-H, generally form a lesser proportion of the total and can reside near the surface or in defects inside the opal.

The structure of low-pressure polymorphs of anhydrous silica consist of frameworks of fully-corner bonded tetrahedra of SiO4. The higher temperature polymorphs of silica cristobalite and tridymite are frequently the first to crystallize from amorphous anhydrous silica, and the local structures of microcrystalline opals also appear to be closer to that of cristobalite and tridymite than to quartz. The structures of tridymite and cristobalite are closely related and can be described as hexagonal and cubic close-packed layers. It is therefore possible to have intermediate structures in which the layers are not regularly stacked.

The crystal structure of crystalline α-cristobalite. Locally, the structures of some opals, opal-C, are similar to this.
Enlarge
The crystal structure of crystalline α-cristobalite. Locally, the structures of some opals, opal-C, are similar to this.

Microcrystalline opal

Opal-CT has been interpreted as consisting of clusters of stacking of cristobalite and tridymite over very short length scales. The spheres of opal in opal-CT are themselves made up of tiny microcrystalline blades of cristobalite and tridymite. Opal-CT has occasionally been further subdivided in the literature. Water content may be as high as 10 wt%. Lussatite is a synonym.

Opal-C is interpreted as consisting of localized order of α-cristobalite with a lot of stacking disorder. Typical water content is about 1.5wt%. Lussatine is a synonym.

Non-crystalline opal

Two broad categories of non-crystalline opals, sometimes just referred to as opal-A, have been proposed

Opal-AG: Aggregated spheres of silica, with water filling the space in between. Precious opal and potch opal are generally varieties of this, the difference being in the regularity of the sizes of the spheres and their packing.

Opal-AN: Water-containing amorphous silica-glass. Hyalite is a synonym.

Non-crystalline silica in siliceous sediments is reported to gradually transform to opal-CT and then opal-C as a result of diagenesis, due to the increasing overburden pressure in sedimentary rocks, as some of the stacking disorder is removed (Cady et al., 1996)PDF.

Historical superstitions

In the middle ages, opal was considered a stone that could provide great luck because it was believed to possess all the virtues of each gemstone whose color was represented in the color spectrum of the opal. [6] Even under the last czar at the beginning of the 20th century, it was believed that when a Russian of any sex, of any rank, saw an opal, amongst other goods offered for sale, he or she would not buy anything more, since, in the judgement of subjects of the czar, the opal embodied the evil eye. [6]

Opals in popular culture

The opal is the official gemstone of South Australia and the Commonwealth of Australia, and the country's women's national team in basketball is nicknamed The Opals.

The official state gem stone for Nevada is precious black Fire Opal, in recognition of the black opal found in Virgin Valley, Humboldt County, Nevada.

Opal is the traditional birthstone of the month of October.

Famous opals

  • The Andamooka Opal, presented to Queen Elizabeth II, also known as the Queen's Opal
  • The Aurora Australis Opal, considered to be the most valuable black opal
  • The Black Prince Opal, originally known as Harlequin Prince
  • The Empress of Australia Opal
  • The Fire Queen Opal
  • The Flame Queen Opal
  • The Flamingo Opal
  • The Halley's Comet Opal, the world's largest uncut black opal
  • The Jupiter Five Opal
  • The Olympic Australis Opal, reported to be the largest and most valuable gem opal ever found
  • The Pride of Australia Opal, also known as the Red Emperor Opal
  • The Red Admiral Opal, also known as the Butterfly Stone

See also

References

Commons-logo.svg
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m
  2. ^ Sanskrit, Tamil, and Pahlavi Dictionaries. U. of Cologne.
  3. ^ http://www.nrw.qld.gov.au/mines/fossicking/opal.html Queensland opal
  4. ^ "Utilization of "KIBO" in Nano-technology and Nano-science—Nature's Beauty to Be Reproduced in SpacePDF". Science & Technology in Japan No. 85. (2005).
  5. ^ 27th Space Station Utilization Workshop in Japan -outline -
  6. ^ a b Fernie M.D., W.T. (1907). Precious Stones for Curative Wear. Bristol, John Wright & Co.. , cpages 249

 
Translations: Translations for: Opal

Dansk (Danish)
n. - opal

Nederlands (Dutch)
opaal

Français (French)
n. - opale

Deutsch (German)
n. - Opal

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (ορυκτολ.) οπάλλιο

Italiano (Italian)
opale

Português (Portuguese)
n. - opala (f)

Русский (Russian)
опал

Español (Spanish)
n. - ópalo

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - opal

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
蛋白石, 猫眼石

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 蛋白石, 貓眼石

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 단백석

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - オパール

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) حجر كريم ( كثير الألوان)‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮לשם (אבן יקרה)‬


 
 

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