File:First STM.jpg

Zvirozvemo zvezanhi hazvitsigirwe mumimwe mitauro.
Kubva Wikipedia

Fayera repachivambo(2,592 × 1,944 pixels, file size: 1.33 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Fayera rino rinobva kuWikimedia Commons uye rinogona kushandiswa nemimwe mwishumo. Mutsananguro uri pazanhi remutsananguro we fayera waro wakaratidzwa pazasi.

Mutsananguro

This is a Nobel Prize winning example of doing more with less

First Scanning tunneling microscope IBM Research Zurich 1981 (Explanation from Deutsches Museum with wiki hyperlinks added by me)

The scanning tunneling microscope has given rise to new possibilities of investigating surfaces on the scale of individual atoms. Rather than "seeing" the atoms, the instrument "feels" them by scanning the surface line by line with a very sharp tip at a constant distance of a few atomic diameters. This distance is minimized in a feedback loop by the tunneling current tip and sample when a voltage is applied. The current is extremely dependent on the distance between tip and sample - the smaller the distance, the larger the current. Reducing the distance by only one-tenth of a nanometer (a millonth of a millimeter) increase the current tenfold. A tripod of piezoelectric rods allows very precise movement of the microscope tip in all directions. By applying and removing a voltage, these elements expand and shrink, between 0.1 and 10 picometers (a billionth of a millimeter) per millivolt.

The STM measurement results constitute a field of scanned lines from which a three-dimensional image of the surface can be obtained in millionfold magnification e.g. by computer image processing.

Since the breakthrough of the first STM in 1981, numerous further developments and variations quickly led to a wealth of new knowledge in quite diverse research areas. The STM principle is generally considered a key in nanotechnology owing to its capability to image surfaces and investigate their properties on the nanometer scale. and ultimately, even to change structures atom by atom. The first significant step in the latter direction was the controlled deposition of individual atoms in 1990.

The invention of the scanning tunneling microscope brought Gerd Binnig , a German, and Heinrich Rohrer, a Swiss, both from IBM Zurich Reasearch Laboratory, the physics Nobel prize in 1986.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scanning_tunneling_microscope

See also: www.deutsches-museum-bonn.de/ausstellungen/meisterwerke/2...

i061706 120
Musi
Mabviro First Scanning Tunneling Microscope Deutsches Museum
Munyori J Brew
Camera location48° 07′ 49.11″ N, 11° 34′ 59.03″ E Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

Kurezinesa

w:en:Creative Commons
Uzikano gova saizvo
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
Wakasungunuka:
  • kugova – kucheza, kugovera ne kutumira basa
  • kurhimikisa – kugadzirisa basa
Pasi pemamiriro anotevera:
  • Uzikano – Unofanhira kupa kiredhiti yakakodzeka, ipa kochekero yekune rezinesi, uye ratidza kana zvichinjirudzo zvaitwa. Ita sokudaro zviichienderana nenzira inonzwisisika, asi kwete nenzira ingaratidze zvekudii kuti murezinesi anokutsigira kana kushandiso kwako.
  • gova saizvo – If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same or compatible license as the original.
This image, originally posted to Flickr, was reviewed on August 15, 2008 by the administrator or reviewer File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske), who confirmed that it was available on Flickr under the stated license on that date.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts Chirungu

copyrighted Chirungu

inception Chirungu

28 Chivabvu 2006

48°7'49.109"N, 11°34'59.034"E

Nhoroondo ye fayera

Dzvanya pa musi/nguva kuti uringe fayera sekuoneka kwaraita panguva iyoyo.

Musi/NguvaMfananoudokoMitanduMushandisiKomenda
parizvino14:07, 15 Nyamavhuvhu 2008Mfananoudoko weuhlovo sekubva 14:07, 15 Nyamavhuvhu 20082,592 × 1,944 (1.33 MB)File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske) {{Information |Description= This is a Nobel Prize winning example of doing more with less First [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scanning_tunneling_microscope Scanning tunneling microscope] IBM Research Zurich 1981 (Explanation from Deutsches Museum with

There are no pages that use this file.

Kushandiswa kwe fayera pasirose

Mawiki anotevera ayo anoshandisa fayera iri:

Metadhata