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originally posted in:Secular Sevens
Edited by New Radical: 5/1/2013 6:44:01 PM
9

The "World's Smallest Movie" - Manipulating Individual Atoms

If there was any justice in the world, this would win several Oscars.

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  • Interesting, very interesting.

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  • Edited by God: 5/4/2013 6:38:28 PM
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    People seem to be asking a lot of questions like "aren't atoms are too small to see and move?" and "why can't we see the background?" I'm going to try and explain. What you are looking at is not a photograph of actual atoms, atoms don't look like anything because they are too small for light to be used to see them. This image was created using a machine called a "scanning tunneling microscope." This machine works by using a microscopic probe (picture above) generating an electric charge to essentially 'feel' the size and position of the atoms, or at least their charge. Since humans see with light instead of electric charges, the microscope must then use this data to generate a computer image representation of the charges it feels letting us see what it sees (this is what you see in the film). This is why they are silver balls, because we can't see the atoms but instead are seeing a representation of the field created by the electrons, and also why atoms out of the probes range don't show up.

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  • I dunno, I think it should be the other way around, OP. We learned how to manipulate atoms and one of the things we do is make a movie out of it. If there's any justice in the world, we should be ashamed. Cue the Zoidberg "you should feel bad" hullabaloo.

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  • I thought atoms were mostly empty space with a nucleus of protons and neutrons? Why do they appear perfectly spherical and silverish?

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    • Do you seriously think that garbage should win an Oscar? It's geared towards science, not entertainment.

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      • That's amazing. However, what's the gray background they seem to be "floating" on, just wondering?

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        • I don't know about an Oscar, I mean, the plot is lacking, and the characters are flat... :P

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        • This was posted earlier, but whatever.

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        • Perhaps I've been living under a rock, but I was under the impression relocating atoms at arbitrary locations with this accuracy was entirely out of humanity's current technological grasp. Second, what nuclei am I looking at, and third, how is this being recorded?

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