Atomic pen achieves invisible victory

November 1 2008No Commented

Categorized Under: Uncategorized


Atomic pen achieves invisible victory

Putting the world’s tiniest book to shame — not to mention the Torah-inscribed grain of rice — a research team at Osaka University has “written” the letters “Si” using an atomic pen that interchanges silicon and tin atoms, enabling those who have the time, resources, and patience to manipulate said atoms one by one. The results are a diminutive 2 x 2 nm (or 40,000 times smaller than a strand of hair) which took about an hour and a half to complete. The previous best was a laughably large 0.07 x 0.10 mm tome hailing from SFU’s Nano Imaging Lab. “It’s not possible to write any smaller than this,” said researcher Masayuki Abe, adding that, while the project sounded impressive on (really tiny) paper, it had failed to garner him any coveted cool points at the local bar. Next steps for the project will be determined once the team puts the finishing touches on the “g” and the “h.”

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