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Scientists at Delft University of Technology have managed to watch a single atomic nucleus flip its magnetic state in real time. Using a scanning tunneling microscope, they indirectly read the nucleus ...
Researchers from Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands have been able to see the magnetic nucleus of an atom ...
Researchers at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands have observed the magnetic nucleus of an atom flipping ...
Researchers from Delft University of Technology in The Netherlands have been able to see the magnetic nucleus of an atom ...
Seventy years ago, in Osmond Laboratory on Penn State's University Park campus, Erwin W. Müller, Evan Pugh Research Professor ...
Seventy years ago, in Osmond Laboratory on Penn State's University Park campus, Erwin W. Müller, Evan Pugh Research Professor ...
Researchers at University of Cambridge and University of Newcastle recently introduced a new method to measure helium atom diffraction with microscopic spatial resolution.
Scientists have created the world's fastest microscope, which they hope will answer fundamental questions about how electrons behave.
A traditional optical microscope can magnify objects by more than a thousand times, but scientists are often interested in even smaller things. Electron microscopy can make an object appear one ...
Caption 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 ...
The microscope uses electron pulses at the speed of a single attosecond to get a clear look at moving electrons.
The University of Alberta recently found its way into the Guinness Book of World Records by creating a one-atom wide tip for their electron microscope. This super-resolution microscope is a ...
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