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According to Scientific American, physicists have outdone Apple's newest iPhone by creating the most accurate image of atoms to date using a gadget that magnifies images 100 million times. With a study released last month, the researchers that broke the record for the highest resolution microscope in 2018 outdid themselves.
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The sample was visualised using an approach known as electron ptychography, in which an electron beam is fired at an object and bounces off of it to produce a scan that algorithms use to reverse engineer the above image. This technique was previously limited to imaging things that were a few atoms thick.
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But the new study lays out a technique that can image samples 30 to 50 nanometers wide—a more than 10-fold increase in resolution, they report in Science. The breakthrough could help develop more efficient electronics and batteries, a process that requires visualizing components on the atomic level.
Reference(s): Science
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