Physicists have created the world’s fastest microscope, and it’s so quick that it can spot electrons in motion. The new device, a newer version of a transmission electron microscope, captures images ...
A team of researchers has developed the first transmission electron microscope which operates at the temporal resolution of a single attosecond, allowing for the first still-image of an electron in ...
Researchers at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands have observed the magnetic nucleus of an atom flipping ...
At many universities, student researchers rarely get the chance to even see a transmission electron microscope, or TEM, up ...
Atomic-scale imaging emerged in the mid-1950s and has been advancing rapidly ever since—so much so, that back in 2008, physicists successfully used an electron microscope to image a single hydrogen ...
Physicists have performed the first quantum calculations to be carried out using individual atoms sitting on a surface. At some level, everything in nature is quantum and can, in principle, perform ...
Hosted on MSN
Electron Microscope Hack to see Graphene
Using a STEM-in-SEM conversion holder, we can convert a scanning electron microscope into a scanning transmission microscope. Neat! ==== Timeline ==== 0:00 Intro 0:27 How an SEM works 1:50 ...
Researchers at Michigan State University have figured out how to use a fast laser to wiggle atoms in a way that temporarily ...
Research Engineer Mr Jonathan Aristya Setyadji (left) and Assistant Professor Tan Xipeng (behind) – from the Department of Mechanical Engineering in the College of Design and Engineering at NUS – ...
A group of scientists from Nagoya University in Japan used a novel combination of technologies to investigate the principles of light–matter interaction in nanomaterials at the lowest and fastest ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results