Lead Atoms Imaged During Phase Change
fsh writes "José Gómez-Rodríguez and company from the Madrid Autonomous University have successfully imaged the phase change of a lead crystal from 45K to 135K. They built their very own variable temperature scanning-tunneling microscope, capable of continuously scanning an area 20nm square throughout a 100K temperature jump. This was a surface phase change, but their technique will hopefully pave the way for imaging other phase changes, like solid to liquid. Check out the movie."
I did some searching, but couldn't find any meaningful applications for this. I am not saying science for the sake of science is not meaningful, but I was just curious what we could use this for. If anyone can enlighten me I would be much obliged.
Try using MirrorDot.
Well, I can think of many reasons why this is quite amazing:
-The field of view is a mere 400nm^2
-We are watching a phase transition happen at the atomic level
-Its the first time this has ever been done
-(corallary: the stable viewpoint of the "camera" during this process is a first as well)
-Could have applications in thermodynamics, nanotechnology, bio-engineering, etc. etc.
Myself, I find this fascinating.
i can't think of a witty signature, so i won't try.
I'm really intrigued by the temperature-induced crystal structure change. Never really thought about that possibility.
WEDGE: That's impossible, even for a computer.
LUKE: It's not impossible. I used to bull's-eye womp rats in my
T-sixteen back home. They're not much bigger than two meters.
Coral cache.
Hey I keep expecting that dude in the green monster costume to suddenly pop out in front of the camera and scream. Can someone do a re-edit!
I watched the video and I didn't see a damn thing happen. I think It's just another science boondoggle. What so special about a grey blob rolling around on some egg crate thingie?
The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.
The ability to be able to closely watch individual atoms perform their trickery and as a result prove older theories/bring up new questions allows chemists/physicists to make new advances in the field of nanotechnology, as an example. Funny things happen on this small a scale, and there are forces at work which don't manifest themselves in the same way on the macroscopic scale - as such these systems that can now be (indirectly) observed are harder to predict mathematically. Knowing how they interact during phases changes can help to understand how they can be controlled.