The Microscope That Can Actually See Atoms

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  • Опубликовано: 7 апр 2020
  • Most people know that you can't see atoms... or can you? With this special microscope, scientists actually can! In the late 1970s, two physicists in Switzerland set out to invent a new type of microscope using quantum physics that would allow them to do something no one had ever done before: see the individual atoms in a sheet of metal. Join Olivia Gordon for a peek into the tiny world of atoms in this fun new episode of SciShow!
    SciShow has a spinoff podcast! It's called SciShow Tangents. Check it out www.scishowtangents.org
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    Sources:
    www.nobelprize.org/prizes/phy...
    www.ibm.com/blogs/research/20...
    capricorn.bc.edu/wp/zeljkovic...
    books.google.se/books?id=DngH...
    books.google.se/books?id=ijlo...
    dqmp.unige.ch/renner/jt-stm/
    www.fkf.mpg.de/2489208/01_Pre...
    www.fkf.mpg.de/5191581/dok92-...
    cryogenicsociety.org/resource...
    books.google.at/books?id=LHts...
    www.nobelprize.org/uploads/20...
    www.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhib...
    books.google.at/books?id=qHaf...
    phys.org/news/2018-07-closer-...
    books.google.at/books?id=O-LM...
    www.tf.uni-kiel.de/matwis/ama...
    books.google.hr/books?hl=en&l...
    www.sciencedirect.com/science...
    www.physics.purdue.edu/nanophy...
    www.nytimes.com/1983/10/04/sc...
    Image Sources:
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    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...

Комментарии • 805

  • @alienatedweapon5679
    @alienatedweapon5679 4 года назад +769

    "Its not rocket science"
    Yeah its quantum physics mom

    • @sdfkjgh
      @sdfkjgh 4 года назад +19

      "Dammit, Smithers, this isn't rocket science, it's brain surgery! Now hand me that ice cream scoop!"

    • @sdfkjgh
      @sdfkjgh 4 года назад +2

      Also, this guy: www.scp-wiki.net/scp-890

    • @lollsazz
      @lollsazz 4 года назад +14

      @@sdfkjgh Unfortunately, I think most people have never seen brain surgery and how imprecise it sometimes is: "let's scoop this out and hope for the best"

    • @sdfkjgh
      @sdfkjgh 4 года назад +6

      @@lollsazz:"Hey, Bubba, lookit whahappans when I touch this wiggly bit ritcheer..."

    • @ReverendRaff
      @ReverendRaff 4 года назад +3

      It's only Rocket Surgery. How hard could it be?

  • @jessicatjandra5815
    @jessicatjandra5815 4 года назад +223

    An episode on microscopes! As a materials scientist, I’m happy to see how many people are excited about this. I have used electron microscopes, atomic force microscopes and scanning tunneling microscopes before, and I can confirm they are as cool as Olivia made them sound :)

    • @mattphorwich
      @mattphorwich 4 года назад +2

      Will be rad to see when graphene and all the 2d materials come our world...

    • @justingould2020
      @justingould2020 4 года назад +5

      I do have one question; how do you control the distance from the sample? I assume you need to get close, but contact would damage things?

    • @jessicatjandra5815
      @jessicatjandra5815 4 года назад +6

      Justin Gould yes you distance from the sample is important. There are a few modes of rastering, e.g. probe maintaining constant distance (but this will cause the probe to hit especially rough samples), or maintaining constant potential, etc. The surface roughness of a sample is very important and usually the probe tips need to be replaced every few readings to maintain a sufficiently sharp tip for better image resolution.

    • @jessicatjandra5815
      @jessicatjandra5815 4 года назад +2

      Matt Horwich yes! 2d materials are not my field of specialty, but they are very very cool. It’s interesting how other fields of materials can be so related to seemingly unrelated things (e.g. nanomaterials for drug delivery, ceramics for stronger fibres, and futuristic applications of graphene all use the same interfacial science!)

    • @mattphorwich
      @mattphorwich 4 года назад +2

      @@jessicatjandra5815 nice! The smart materials are really exciting as well...seeing how they can be applied to the medical field, architecture and robotics, and aerospace!

  • @tammymccaslin4787
    @tammymccaslin4787 4 года назад +515

    I have wanted to know these things since I learned what a microscope was, and no one could ever explain it so I could understand. You just did. Thank you for answering a 30 year old question for me!

    • @tlehman0001
      @tlehman0001 4 года назад +10

      Just Google something the next time you have a question. 30 years?

    • @amarine1472
      @amarine1472 4 года назад +1

      @@tlehman0001 "no one could understand it so i could understand"

    • @tammymccaslin4787
      @tammymccaslin4787 4 года назад +4

      Hey thanks for making me feel stupid though. I really needed that this morning.

    • @tlehman0001
      @tlehman0001 4 года назад +5

      Just some advice for the future. So you don't go so long wondering something.

    • @tlehman0001
      @tlehman0001 4 года назад +5

      @@amarine1472 there is a ton of lay information on STM. Its been around for 40 years and has produced amazing images. I'm just saying, if you are curious about something, do a little research and most anything is on the internet. You will have satisfied that curiosity and will lead you to crave more.

  • @sixstix965
    @sixstix965 4 года назад +240

    Atoms "you can't see me"
    Scientist in background "for now "

  • @klutterkicker
    @klutterkicker 4 года назад +110

    This made me remember "A Boy and His Atom" the movie IBM made with a scanning tunneling microscope.

    • @GMC997
      @GMC997 4 года назад +2

      @dontknow Why?

    • @OfficialKrYpToNyt
      @OfficialKrYpToNyt 4 года назад +3

      @dontknow Not sure how serious you are but, these tools exist and have existed for quite a while now. In fact, there exists more that one method to move single atoms at a time. Such small nano-scale movements are easily achievable using piezoelectric crystals, in this case, used either for controlling the movement of the sample or the moving sensing tip by down to sub-nanometre movements when needed.

    • @nydydn
      @nydydn 4 года назад +3

      just for anyone who might read @dontknow comments. He is wrong, that was not a prank, atoms can be moved individually. Feel free to check it on google, snopes, wikipedia, etc. @dontknow is either delusional. or a troll.

    • @nydydn
      @nydydn 4 года назад +2

      @dontknow the internet is filled with evidence that IBM is not lying about "a boy and his atom". I am not going to fall for a troll. Anyone can google scholar "a boy and his atom". You are the one who needs to bring evidence that is contrary to current scientific agreement.

    • @rogueanuerz
      @rogueanuerz 4 года назад +1

      @dontknow then you assume that quantum computer was fake then

  • @EverythingScience
    @EverythingScience 4 года назад +64

    I've had the chance to work with TEM's that could see the individual planes of atoms on surfaces and it's incredibly insane the how far imaging has come and the kinds of things you can see

    • @EverythingScience
      @EverythingScience 4 года назад +3

      @Private Property Maybe you could help me understand what they even are, I googled it and read a little on them. Most of what we looked at were semiconductors and nanoparticles so they were very clean to start with and wouldn't have much on them

  • @sebastianelytron8450
    @sebastianelytron8450 4 года назад +294

    How does a penny look under a microscope?
    Magnificent.

  • @onlyrick
    @onlyrick 4 года назад +8

    About electrons having a "certain probability of being somewhere at a given time" - This will sound familiar if you have ever tried to get a drummer to show up for a gig.

  • @GoldSrc_
    @GoldSrc_ 4 года назад +13

    Remember IBM's movie A Boy and His Atom?
    Amazing how far we have pushed this mammal brain of ours, from being on trees and banging rocks, to landing on the moon and being able to see individual atoms, just amazing.
    And then, we have the flat earthers and other science deniers *sigh*

  • @DavidChadwell
    @DavidChadwell 4 года назад +189

    The real question is how do they move the needle in such a fine resolution to find individual atoms? What does that machinery look like?

    • @randomabidingdude
      @randomabidingdude 4 года назад +28

      A "screw within a screw" gets you a micrometer... so scale that up as far as it takes to gain another 10,000 orders of magnitude to get down to angstroms.

    • @miskers12
      @miskers12 4 года назад +221

      Piezoelectric actuators. By applying a large voltage across certain materials/crystals, you can get them to expand by very small amounts. The biggest issue with this is that they have a nonlinear response, meaning that you apply 100V, it might move 10 nm, but if you apply 150V it might move 20 nm. To account for this a feedback loop is used, in this case it is usually based on the tip-sample current, and for the x an y they use linear variable differential transformers which can measure very small distances for the feedback loop.
      Source: Im a condensed matter physicist who uses atomic force microscopes and scanning tunnelling microscopes almost daily.

    • @chonchjohnch
      @chonchjohnch 4 года назад +12

      Joseph Albro that’s incredible!

    • @DavidChadwell
      @DavidChadwell 4 года назад +37

      @@miskers12 Thank you for that great explanation. I'm a mechanical engineer so I was skeptical it could be done mechanically in any way at all. The piezoelectric actuators make a lot more sense. They have very limited range, but if you are measuring atoms, I suppose they have a massive range.

    • @skinisdelicious3365
      @skinisdelicious3365 4 года назад

      Probably a lot like a lot of gear reductions. Scanning one atom probably took days maybe longer

  • @nicholaicorbie
    @nicholaicorbie 4 года назад +183

    This is one of the best SciShow episodes

    • @anastrixnoodles
      @anastrixnoodles 4 года назад +6

      I was thinking the same. I smashed that like button with a satisfied smile on my face.
      Now I want to know more.

    • @annaliseoconner9266
      @annaliseoconner9266 4 года назад +2

      I agree completely. It was completely new to me and I found it exhilarating.

    • @niki123489
      @niki123489 4 года назад +2

      I agree! People who work on this video did a great job.

    • @justmery6902
      @justmery6902 3 года назад

      I agree

  • @Artifying
    @Artifying 4 года назад +9

    I only recently learned about STMs in my microbiology class. I literally gasped when my professor showed an image of a piece of DNA with helicase and polymerase working to replicate it.

  • @aaronmclaughlin4745
    @aaronmclaughlin4745 4 года назад +13

    Microscope: Where are you Electron?
    Electron: I'm wherever I need to be.

    • @mikegLXIVMM
      @mikegLXIVMM 3 года назад +2

      I'm statistically where I need to be.

  • @Danflave
    @Danflave 4 года назад +100

    Me: Holy cow! I'm going to see what a friggin' ATOM looks like under a microscope!!
    SciShow: Here's a picture of some yellow stripes with a honeycomb-looking pattern.

    • @robergarcia11
      @robergarcia11 4 года назад +12

      It is a contrast scale from 0 to 1, basically a black and white image but yes, that is how atoms look like

    • @xantyleger7888
      @xantyleger7888 4 года назад +6

      I have used this type of microscope before. This is just what the images look like.

    • @logannasty3240
      @logannasty3240 4 года назад +4

      SciShow would suit perfectly as a podcast. They barely show any pics or videos.

    • @itsella9400
      @itsella9400 4 года назад +4

      logan nasty they have one, it’s called sci show tangents

    • @forkevbot
      @forkevbot 4 года назад +4

      atoms don't "look" like anything. To photons they are mostly empty space honestly.

  • @SouthpawSesto
    @SouthpawSesto 4 года назад +118

    IBM has a video showing off this cool technology in a video called "A Boy and His Atom: The Worlds Smallest Movie". As far as I am aware, they used the microscope to pick up and move individual atoms to make a short stop motion animation. You can even see the EM waves picked up from high concentrations of atoms!
    Here's a link to the video: ruclips.net/video/oSCX78-8-q0/видео.html

    • @avimohan6594
      @avimohan6594 4 года назад +11

      Dayum, you beat me to it. This was _literally_ the first thing that occurred to me when I read the title. Awesome IBM video, innit?

  • @rybohm9829
    @rybohm9829 4 года назад +66

    “just the tip”

    • @beefcakeandgravy
      @beefcakeandgravy 4 года назад +10

      And only for a minute.....

    • @GECKman88
      @GECKman88 4 года назад

      sharpened... oh, ouch.

    • @joegibbs1454
      @joegibbs1454 4 года назад +2

      Just wanted to make sure this blue collared humor was represented somewhere in this comment section. This will suffice. :D

    • @dosbox907
      @dosbox907 3 года назад +1

      keep your stick on the ice

  • @1997jankuschef
    @1997jankuschef 4 года назад

    Scientific journalism like this is incredibly difficult and amazing. You guys take a hell of a chance by stepping into these fields and condense the information so practically.

  • @makoyoverfelt3320
    @makoyoverfelt3320 4 года назад +20

    That’s a pretty boss way to craft an instrument.

  • @joshbobst1629
    @joshbobst1629 2 года назад +1

    Olivia has really grown on me. I don't want anybody else delivering my science news now.

  • @SunriseFireberry
    @SunriseFireberry 4 года назад +9

    I've looked at atoms
    from both sides now
    from up and down
    but still somehow
    I really don't know atoms
    at all

  • @anupsharma6465
    @anupsharma6465 4 года назад +4

    I am still amazed how they handle vibration ..I have worked on vibration removal on ultramicro weighing machine even a footstep 10 meter away vibrate the reading here they are talking about an atom tick!!

  • @RD-eg1df
    @RD-eg1df 4 года назад +1

    This blow my mind. To be able to make a needle so sharp you can poke at atoms, hot damn

  • @KCSutherland
    @KCSutherland 4 года назад +4

    Three years.
    These scientists took on a task that had been considered impossible just a couple decades prior, using several different complicated results in high-level branches of science to achieve it.
    And it took them only 3 years.

    • @Josh-qe1hw
      @Josh-qe1hw 3 года назад

      Well technically were 10000 years into recorded history. All things are predicated. And yes thats an eye roll inducing statement but its true

  • @garygenerous8982
    @garygenerous8982 4 года назад +25

    Does anyone have a link to the video mentioned at the end of the researchers seeing blood clotting using an STM? I would love to see that.

    • @anneanderson145
      @anneanderson145 4 года назад +2

      I'm chomping at the bit to see that! I'll let you know if I find anything.

    • @zal2448
      @zal2448 4 года назад +2

      ruclips.net/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/видео.html

    • @rayleighslivers2187
      @rayleighslivers2187 4 года назад

      @@zal2448 i have memorised the id. You cannot defeat me

  • @THETRIVIALTHINGS
    @THETRIVIALTHINGS 4 года назад +1

    This is something that I've wanted to know since I first read about atoms. How atoms look, how we could see them.

  • @nordlyssrlys6945
    @nordlyssrlys6945 3 года назад +1

    "The roadtrip to the destination is far more amazing than the destination itself"

  • @wizardoffrobozz
    @wizardoffrobozz 3 года назад +1

    Olivia Gordon, you present an exemplary talk. easy to understand and continuity i rarely encounter. i learned today. thank you.

  • @matthewfreudenrich6557
    @matthewfreudenrich6557 4 года назад +2

    I work in an STM lab, its cool seeing this in a SciShow episode

  • @exploding_pineapples
    @exploding_pineapples 4 года назад +4

    So that's how "A Boy and His Atom" was made!

  • @tobiramasenju6290
    @tobiramasenju6290 4 года назад +11

    Sci Show just keeps getting better year by year!

  • @sdfkjgh
    @sdfkjgh 4 года назад +5

    3:37 I regularly perform a somewhat similar process with my teeth and a piece of spaghetti, because I like to sharpen spaghetti.

  • @KriegZombie
    @KriegZombie 4 года назад +5

    I'm shocked you didn't mention IBM's "A Boy and His Atom".

  • @evawettergren7492
    @evawettergren7492 4 года назад +5

    Ok, this perfectly explains why I belive what scientists tell me... because they make stuff that actually work! And reveal new things nobody had any idea about before.

  • @nerfthecows
    @nerfthecows 4 года назад +1

    I'm not sure it was ment to be funny but the dead pan "electronics are not one atom thick” gave me a great laugh

  • @thenekom
    @thenekom 4 года назад +2

    I can't believe that actually worked. Science never ceases to amaze.

  • @cgaccount3669
    @cgaccount3669 4 года назад

    Great episode! I just realized I've never actually seen a picture of an electron microscope. I've seen images produced by them of course but nobody ever shows the microscope. And I never thought to look it up

  • @MrPinknumber
    @MrPinknumber 4 года назад +1

    OMG ! this is an excellent explanation, thank you for making this video :DD

  • @aifg8064
    @aifg8064 3 года назад +1

    amazing full video played so much infornation thumbs up keep up the good work ...exellent video

  • @sarupi641
    @sarupi641 4 года назад +1

    Great video, I would have loved more pics or videos showing the microscope images.

  • @ShauriePvs
    @ShauriePvs 4 года назад

    This is the best explanation and certainly is one of the best videos from SciShow!

  • @aladdin517
    @aladdin517 4 года назад +2

    That was an amazing episode!
    Fascinating!

  • @objectivemillennial2117
    @objectivemillennial2117 4 года назад +2

    omfg this is the longest tutorial i didn't ask for ever

  • @Lolalogo
    @Lolalogo 4 года назад +2

    We have one of these at work! I still find really cool.

  • @revan6059
    @revan6059 4 года назад

    4:31 Gave me a damn heart attack, wearing some decent head phones and it made me think someone broke in 🤣

  • @inicolov
    @inicolov 4 года назад +1

    Interesting and informative. I have experience with electron microscopes so I wonder what preparation you have to do on whatever you will be observing with the stm.

  • @davetoms1
    @davetoms1 4 года назад +3

    Olivia's enthusiasm is more infectious than COVID-19! Great video as always :)

  • @crisvermondcreman2894
    @crisvermondcreman2894 3 года назад

    This answers the supernova question with a single atom .Thanks for this video.

  • @knuckleburger
    @knuckleburger 4 года назад +3

    This is science on LSD! Amazing episode, team! Thanks!!!

  • @bobbygilbert2706
    @bobbygilbert2706 4 года назад +1

    This video is super I can feel my head ballooning with knowledge

  • @rwmcgwier
    @rwmcgwier 4 года назад

    This was a fabulous instructional video. I understand quantum mechanics. I can do the math behind entanglement, teleportation, etc. But I never grokked a scanning tunneling microscope until now. It is at once obvious and awe inspiring as the result most true genius is. Thank you!

  • @tgunderwood8399
    @tgunderwood8399 4 года назад

    Love this video. Great topic. Great delivery

  • @valyardelean
    @valyardelean 3 года назад +4

    She looks like Amy from ''The Big Bang Theory''

  • @benjaminverlhac3846
    @benjaminverlhac3846 4 года назад +1

    From someone working on an STM: thank you for explaining that to the public. :)

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas 3 года назад

    this is genius, this is probably the easiest to picture explanation of electrons as a "cloud". brilliant.

  • @stomachegg041
    @stomachegg041 4 года назад +1

    SciShow = Essential workers

  • @matthewirvin6505
    @matthewirvin6505 4 года назад +1

    This blew my mind and it freaks me out

  • @gigglysamentz2021
    @gigglysamentz2021 4 года назад +7

    I feel like this is underrepesenting the effort and number of people necessary to make this happen XD

  • @dexterm2003
    @dexterm2003 4 года назад +2

    So two corrections. 1) The vast majority of electron microscopes use back scattered electrons not transmission electrons to image. 2) The team at IBM used an atomic force microscope AFM not an STM to manipulate their gold atoms.

  • @KaCing818
    @KaCing818 4 года назад +2

    Could you do a video on faraday cages? How they work and stuff

  • @placebomessiah
    @placebomessiah 4 года назад +1

    The description filled in a shitload of blanks! Thanks for this. I always wondered how they sharpened the stylus but I was too lazy to look it up.

  • @chrisboucher1987
    @chrisboucher1987 3 года назад

    The ingenuity is mind-boggling.

  • @BothHands1
    @BothHands1 4 года назад

    i love this video!! more long interesting videos like this!!

  • @kagannasuhbeyoglu
    @kagannasuhbeyoglu 4 года назад

    Great content. Thanks a lot SciShow👍

  • @soupbonep
    @soupbonep 3 года назад

    This is amazing and so cool! They knew how to keep something from being disturbed by small vibrations years before L.I.G.O. was built. Good to know. The precision is incredible!

  • @FalbertForester
    @FalbertForester 4 года назад

    I helped build an AFM from plans as a PHD project back in the 1990s. Was painstaking work, to be sure, but very satisfying when we started getting the first results.

  • @samlienhard1349
    @samlienhard1349 3 года назад

    "has a certain probability of being somewhere at a given time" is also the tracking information provided by UPS

  • @LoriAW3791
    @LoriAW3791 4 года назад

    I love SciShow!
    Love your curls!

  • @anneanderson145
    @anneanderson145 4 года назад +1

    My favorite SciShow episode ever. Thanks!! I wanna see the video of this 9:06 !!!

  • @nikolausdeems1922
    @nikolausdeems1922 4 года назад +1

    Saw Oxford Instruments on one of those! Nice!

  • @mollago
    @mollago 4 года назад +2

    Hey, it's that quiet girl that you graduated highschool with! Glad to see she's doing well

  • @Mike80528
    @Mike80528 2 года назад

    I recall when those first atoms were imaged and when IBM first spelled their name in atoms (nickel?), but I never did look up how the technology worked. Fascinating!

  • @sinohui3
    @sinohui3 3 года назад

    This is amazing. Thank you for sharing.

  • @yasirabdulhakeem
    @yasirabdulhakeem 4 года назад +8

    "Monomolecular edge / Translation / Cool Sword"

    • @nicbell8090
      @nicbell8090 4 года назад

      YasirRiot definitely fantasy/sci fi. Crafting a blade with a liquid dissolving agent and focused electricity, so thin it can slice off atoms

    • @yasirabdulhakeem
      @yasirabdulhakeem 4 года назад

      @@nicbell8090 reference is from Zer0 in Borderlands 3 btw

  • @187Bryce
    @187Bryce 4 года назад

    Wow, this episode is cool!! Great job!

  • @h7opolo
    @h7opolo 4 года назад +2

    3:33 that's amazing

  • @Philomats
    @Philomats 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent presentation. It hard to believe humanity has found a way to see something that small. Next we need to develop a device that can hear the atom.

  • @blocklearners
    @blocklearners 4 года назад

    nice content and nice explained

  • @garrett6064
    @garrett6064 4 года назад

    7:07 So gold; like many things, is a lot prettier if you don't look at it *too* closely.

  • @bryanglaser88
    @bryanglaser88 4 года назад

    I normally don’t get excited over small things, but I totally did this time.

  • @Parents_of_Twins
    @Parents_of_Twins 4 года назад

    We used a patio block suspended from a tripod with bungy cords as our vibration isolation device and amazingly enough it works really well.

    • @Parents_of_Twins
      @Parents_of_Twins 4 года назад

      This is how research groups who are lead by Advisors who aren't good at grant writing collect data. Those that are use the super awesome stuff that people like me wish we had. We wrote a grant one time trying to get the money to purchase a new Conductive Probe AFM which had a TUNA system which was for interrogating surfaces with ultra low currents, at least at that time they were, in the femtoamp range. We used 10 picoamps as a tunneling current when scanning with the STM because we were scanning over a conductive self assembled monolayer and that current range was calculated at the time to be just outside of the monolayer. I would quite literally run an STM all day for free. I really enjoyed the research part of grad school.

  • @maysammirzakhalili4862
    @maysammirzakhalili4862 4 года назад

    Thank you 😊. This video was amazingly fed my hunger for key information on the subject. ,✌️✌️✌️😚😚😚😌🙏🙏💖💖💖💖💖💖💖. I was in need of it.

  • @MrEnjoivolcom1
    @MrEnjoivolcom1 3 года назад +2

    If this doesn't forever prove that "JUST THE TIP" sooo does count, I dunno what will❗

  • @frank.conway
    @frank.conway 3 года назад

    One of the best videos I have ever watched.

  • @ManyHeavens42
    @ManyHeavens42 2 года назад +1

    I got it, i got it, Focus. Finally Somebody ho takes Quantum mechanic seriously .Very Good.this is where super diamonds come in.

  • @therealpunitdh
    @therealpunitdh 4 года назад

    I love it when Amy Farah Fowler explains it so beautifully

  • @comment.highlighted
    @comment.highlighted 2 года назад

    That was Amazing. They developed it so quickly 🤯

  • @riverbender9898
    @riverbender9898 4 года назад

    A brilliant example of science. Thank You.

  • @Kittyxandra19
    @Kittyxandra19 4 года назад +24

    When I think of a mad scientist experiment, this is exactly what I think of.

  • @josealvarez2424
    @josealvarez2424 4 года назад

    I don’t think people are recognizing how awesome it is that this was all done over 40 years ago

  • @KnighteMinistriez
    @KnighteMinistriez 4 года назад +2

    That was interesting. I liked this video.

  • @tursu27
    @tursu27 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the amazing video.

  • @ConstantChaos1
    @ConstantChaos1 4 года назад

    This is the first history lesson I loved

  • @dinojay8410
    @dinojay8410 4 года назад

    STM's....the gift that keeps on giving! 😉😄👍 ... seriously, a cool development and another made possible by or through a multidisciplinary approach of sorts.

  • @jadz.nerdytransfem
    @jadz.nerdytransfem 4 года назад +4

    Ok so basically, you used a tiny needle to use quantum radar to make a 3D map of a sheet of metal while flipping off Newton. COOL!

  • @hollybee5949
    @hollybee5949 4 года назад

    I just submitted a project on this last week!! Where was this video when I needed you 😢

  • @AJKvideoproductions
    @AJKvideoproductions 4 года назад

    This video was one of the greatest

  • @Pancunian
    @Pancunian 4 года назад +2

    Really interesting and well explained (I think) but the incessant upspeak drives me crazy! I wish I but I just cany blank it out

  • @cthulhu4411
    @cthulhu4411 7 месяцев назад

    One step close to quatum entaglement teleporters , beem me uo scotty 😂

  • @Blubb5000
    @Blubb5000 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for the instructions on how to manufacture this microscope. I’ll get right to it.
    Quick side question: Does anybody know a good source for Tungsten wires?

    • @LiLi-or2gm
      @LiLi-or2gm 4 года назад +4

      Incandescent light bulbs.

    • @sdfkjgh
      @sdfkjgh 4 года назад +1

      @Chris2008: This guy: ruclips.net/video/oCIXnhjSnM8/видео.html

    • @Blubb5000
      @Blubb5000 4 года назад +3

      @@LiLi-or2gm Thank you!!
      This also explains why there are no more incandescent light bulbs in the stores. Everybody build their own atom microscope.

    • @Hermaniac8
      @Hermaniac8 4 года назад +1

      Goodfellow.com
      That's where I buy mine

  • @rickvessell4903
    @rickvessell4903 Год назад

    I loved this video, and learned a lot. But it did leave me wondering how they actually controlled the position of the needle itself relative to the substrate in such a way that data returned had geometrical meaning.