Periodic Table Etched Onto a Single Hair 59
adeelarshad82 writes "The University of Nottingham's Nanotechnology Center decided to help Professor of chemistry, Martyn Poliakoff celebrate his special day by 'etching' a copy of a Periodic Table of Elements onto a single strand of the scientist's hair using a 'very sophisticated' electron ion beam microscope. The microscope creates a very fine etching of the periodic table only a few microns across by shooting a 'focused ion beam' of gallium ions at the hair. The technology here is nothing revolutionary, but it is inspiring to see a grown man get so giddy with the prospect of seeing science in action."
Useful (Score:1)
That's amazingly useful. Now if only I could carry that book I was meaning to read on a hair in my pocket....
Re: (Score:2)
Did anyone else have the urge to obtain a hare, shave it, and tattoo the periodic table onto it?
Just in time! (Score:3)
Re:Just in time! (Score:4, Informative)
Except this periodic table just lists the elements and their positions.
What is changing is how the weights are displayed.
Re: (Score:3)
Just in time for the Periodic Table to be changed [ottawacitizen.com], making this outdated!
A new kind of hair loss?
Re: (Score:2)
The professor and the team have already addressed that in another video they recorded last week:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQ48TwPKHiQ [youtube.com]
Re: (Score:2)
True. And what a pity, too. They'll have to find the solution to that one before they can etch the Periodic Table onto your dick.
Re: (Score:2)
True. And what a pity. They'll have to find the answer to that one before they can etch the Periodic Table onto your dick.
Re: (Score:1)
So you're saying the periodic table wouldn't fit on it even this way?
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Google "Jessica Biel red bikini"
Re: (Score:2)
Didn't you got my emails?
mental note... (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
"What do you mean I can't bring an electron microscope into the exam hall? That guy has a calculator!"
- RG>
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Real scince breakthrough! (Score:2)
But I could be wrong as I'm hairless.
Wallace & Grommit (Score:2)
The professor in the video sounds a bit like Wallace of "Wallace & Grommit" with the "ooh's" and "aah's".
Re: (Score:1)
His special day (Score:2)
"His special day" (Score:2)
smuggling information. (Score:2)
so now I just need to burn whatever I want on a hair and carry that across countries, decode it on the other side ...
Exam proctors beware! (Score:2)
If you notice a student looking very carefully at her hair, she is probably cheating like this. For enhanced exam security, all body hair must be removed before entering the examination room.
Nerd of the year (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
He taught me at undergraduate level - Atomic and Molecular Structure, and is very well known around the university. He's the brother of film director Stephen Poliakoff, and is one of the nicest people you'll ever meet.
He's also a huge nerd, and has an enormous collection of dog toys (he has no dog) that he uses in his lectures, and his office is full of plastic water bottles from all over the world that he collects "pretty much by accident" - a white lie about a hobby that turned into a real hobby.
This vide
time capsule (Score:2)
missing data (Score:1)
With no atomic masses included, this table is useless for cheating on my Chem tests!
Next challenge (Score:1)
Call Holmes! (Score:1)
The team from the Nanotechnology and Nanoscience Centre also entered the festive spirit and took advantage of the wintry weather by engraving the words 'Merry Christmas' onto a snowflake. Philip Moriarty, professor of physics, said: 'Although writing on a snowflake is on one hand a bit of seasonal fun, it's also a neat demonstration of the powerful capabilities of the tools that scientists use in the lab on a day-to-day basis.'
What everyone has missed from this particular version of the story is that Nottin
Call Holmes! (Score:1)
The team from the Nanotechnology and Nanoscience Centre also entered the festive spirit and took advantage of the wintry weather by engraving the words 'Merry Christmas' onto a snowflake.
Philip Moriarty, professor of physics, said: 'Although writing on a snowflake is on one hand a bit of seasonal fun, it's also a neat demonstration of the powerful capabilities of the tools that scientists use in the lab on a day-to-day basis.'
What has been missed from this article is that Nottingham University has a *Profes
Let me know when (Score:1)
they get a complete LOC on a single strand of hair.,,
old news is old! (Score:1)
Saw this on Sciam.com probably two weeks ago, and on fark.com a few days after that...
So, is the approval process just that slow here?
Re: (Score:1)
Thoughtful Gift (Score:1)
Revised elements song (Score:3)
A more impressive feat would be rewriting Tom Lehrer's elements song to accomodate all the new elements of which the news has come to Harvard. Ununseptium doesn't have the lyrical qualities of "Indium" and "Gallium".
I will just write it on my hand like homer simpson (Score:2)
I will just write it on my hand like homer simpson.
hairs in vacuum (Score:3)
Martyn Poliakoff says:
I don't think I've ever had any of my hairs put into vacuum before.
- he must have one hairy apartment!
--
On the other hand it would have been even cooler if they stuck a few atoms of each element from the periodic table onto his hair in the right order as well. Bonus points for doing it while the hair is still on his head. More bonus points for doing it to every hair on his head. Extra super bonus points for trying to go through TSA at a local airport with that kind of hair to see what would happen, would they detect things like uranium?
Re: (Score:2)
A single atom of Uranium, no chance.
The amount of Polonium 110 used to kill Alexander Litvenenko was about 10 micrograms, which is significantly more than a single atom, and no airport detector is going to pick that up, especially if it's inside a container (it's an alpha emitter only).
More amusing was the "outrage" on talk radio shows here from members of the public (and the host himself) about why there weren't procedures and detectors in place to pick this sort of thing up at airports to prevent it happe
Re: (Score:2)
That's why I said put a bunch of atoms for each element on each hair he has. Don't have to stop at only the head either...
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"A bunch" is still not many.
In 10 micrograms of uranium (assuming U238 only) there are 1.43x 10^34 atoms, for example. That's a few more than "a bunch", and 10 micrograms is an extremely small amount.
Re: (Score:2)
so, and with all the hair, put a bunch of atoms on each hair (a bunch, which would be readable with that microscope they used, thus at micron level, with each element being 4 microns across (4/1000000 of a meter across), place a table like that on each hair, you have quite a few. You can go ahead and calculate how many hairs the guy has and how many 4 micron Uraniums and Thoriums and Plutoniums and Americiums he would have.
Re: (Score:2)
Something is very wrong with your calculation. I got 2.53*10^16 atoms.
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Did I divide by Na or 1/Na perhaps? - I did it on my phone without writing anything down.
Related story (Score:1)
Doesn't it amaze you the lengths that students will go to cheat on their tests? They are now engraving the answers in their hair.
Quotes are for...? (Score:1)
What's with all the 'quoted phrases' in TFS that imply the reader would have no clue what these highly-scientific terms mean?
'etching' 'very sophisticated' 'focused ion beam'
Reminds me of the Harvey Birdman episode Back to the Present where George Jetson is goin on about how "In the 'future' we use 'computers' to ..."
Omniprobe (Score:1)