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The motion of single atoms through liquid has been caught on camera for the first time.
Using a sandwich of materials so thin they're effectively two-dimensional, scientists trapped and observed platinum atoms 'swimming' along a surface under different pressures.
originally posted by: Raggedyman
a reply to: jerich0
Dancing to the beat on those invisible strings I guess
originally posted by: iamthevirus
originally posted by: Raggedyman
a reply to: jerich0
Dancing to the beat on those invisible strings I guess
I don't believe in invisible things lol sound familiar?
Science isn't supposed to require any acts of faith, science is objective right...
originally posted by: Raggedyman
a reply to: jerich0
Dancing to the beat on those invisible strings I guess
originally posted by: putnam6
I got questions so there are other atoms there we are just seeing the movement of the platinum atoms, there would be other atoms moving we just can't see them correct? Makes me wonder if is this associated with platinum strength and malleability.
originally posted by: dragonridr
originally posted by: putnam6
I got questions so there are other atoms there we are just seeing the movement of the platinum atoms, there would be other atoms moving we just can't see them correct? Makes me wonder if is this associated with platinum strength and malleability.
No there is no other atoms between the platinum. See if i can explain this they effectively made a sandwich the platinum is contained between two liquid sheets. The sheets are a disulfide monolayer separated by hexagonal boron nitride spacers. picture liquid bubbles that the platinum can skim across. They move these sheets so close together that we can see individual atoms as they glide over the sheet.
originally posted by: randomuser
originally posted by: iamthevirus
originally posted by: Raggedyman
a reply to: jerich0
Dancing to the beat on those invisible strings I guess
I don't believe in invisible things lol sound familiar?
Science isn't supposed to require any acts of faith, science is objective right...
In that case science has no business saying whether God exists or no.