Scientists Scan Striking Nanoscale Images 37
BotnetZombie writes "Wired has up an article/gallery with very impressive images from the nanoworlds around us, and little stories for each picture. Besides giving an inspiring insight into the world of very little things, images of this kind can help scientists in many fields get a better handle on their subjects."
Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
meh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:huhuhuh... (Score:5, Funny)
Say no more!
Scale (Score:5, Interesting)
Notice how the scale on one of them says 470nm? Isn't that something in the neighborhood of green?Unreal!
(I think they may have faked the color.....)
AFM (Score:5, Informative)
It's funny that people are saying these are photoshoped, since it is impossible to use visible light to image objects this small.
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Counter Culture (Score:5, Informative)
In all fairness a scanning-tunneling microscope is similar to an AFM in that it scans it's probe across the surface being imaged. The article also points out that the probe can be used to manipulate matter on the atomic level. When I was in college I used and AFM to manipulate nano-wires. That's not as impressive as moving around individual boron atoms, but it's still pretty cool.
I'm a fan of AFM, because it's a lot cheaper and easier, and because I worked with an AFM back in college.
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And almost certainly true.
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This is one of the factors limiting the microelectronics industry, since they use photolithography, the minimum-feature size is limited by the wavelength of light being used. This is why they are interested in electron-beam, and x-ray lithography.
Sorry to nitpick, but while what you are saying is true, (i.e., wavelength of light limits feature size), practically no one wants to actually use e-beam or real x-ray lithography, mainly because the light sources are tremendously expensive. (The only viable source for real x-ray lithography i.e.,
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Colors used in STM or AFM images are added simply to help "understand" an image better. Unlike optical microscopes, which can zoom onto a tiny surface, STM and AFM don't use light. STM technology works by measuring a very tiny electrical current that jumps between a surface and the metal tip of the microscope when it's close enough (a few nm). AFM works by measuring the bending of a cantilever when its tiny tip is being scrapped from side to side on a surface.
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Re:Woot (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps this will help.
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There is a small probability that the object is in fact completely different than what you measured.
In fact, there is a very small chance that what you were measuring have tunneled somewhere else.
pictures are all well and good (Score:1, Funny)
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Strike? What strike? (Score:1)
Best article in months (Score:3, Interesting)
beautiful but... (Score:2, Insightful)
And keep the monkey frog away from my bagels. Yuck.
Re:beautiful but... (Score:5, Informative)
And touch interfaces, using the same criteria for judgment (criteria that I do not endorse), would be quite absurd as touch (the way we feel it intuitively) ceases to have meaning at length scales several orders of magnitude higher than the nanoworld. We're talking single electrons tunneling from samples to STM tips. That's how an STM "touches" the specimen.
As for looking alien, EVERYTHING that you cannot see with your unaided eyes is alien on a gut level. This is merely one more step down the road of machine-aided sight. I do take your point about these STM images though. That is simply because it is still a young field and fast scanning is still in development. I don't have the citation handy (and it's WAYYY to late here to look it up - it was a physics group at Cornell headed by K. Schwab) but they have already made breakthroughs in performing fast scans, enough to make flyby movies using an STM.
This is analogous to the history of the SEM (the regular electron microscope, essentially e-beams instead of light, but working off the same optical principles). Today's SEM pictures look like the masterpieces dreamed of by a crazy alien high on meth. My faith in artistic vision falls far short of it being able to dream up something like that. Trite I know, but truth is truly stranger than fiction. No Picasso can conceive of, or paint the landscapes uncovered by these fantastic instruments.
Heck, when I worked on an SEM at times, it took all my resolve to not lose myself for my alloted time (several hundred dollars per hour I might add :P) zooming in more and more and more ... on what was essentially a dust speck, or chemical debris. It's a whole 'nuther world down there folks. Feels like Fantastic Voyage when you go and visit. Things look disturbingly familiar but you know they're not. That feeling, greatly magnified, must be what a future explorer might feel when he/she steps onto a brand new planet.
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printing (Score:5, Funny)
and 'fine print' writers rejoice.
Atom-Probe Tomography (Score:4, Interesting)
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Hmmmmm..... (Score:1)
Maps (Score:2)
Painfully scaled (Score:2)