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-   -   7/17/2002: Micro bug on micro machine (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=1869)

Undertoad 07-17-2002 09:48 AM

7/17/2002: Micro bug on micro machine
 
http://cellar.org/2002/microbug.jpg

Thanks to Avi of Worth1000 for this one!

Miniaturization pushes on. Sandia National Laboratories works on MEMS, or MicroElectroMechanical Systems. It's amazing stuff - they're tiny little machines, with gears the size of blood cells. These make it possible to do things that have never been done before. They've put up an Image Gallery for all of us to enjoy, including a set showing tiny little live bugs walking across their tiny machines.

Those are the legs of a spider mite. The surface it's standing on is the micro machine.

Is the mite going to damage it? No! At the site there are movies of bugs walking across micro machines, and even sitting on a little platform getting spun around at high speed. The machines and bugs both survive.

Griff 07-17-2002 01:23 PM

That put a smile on my face. As they fill the world with micro-machines, what happens to the poor spider mite? Will he need to evolve in any way as his enviroment changes?

That Guy 07-17-2002 02:33 PM

Maybe he can get a job asa micro-mechanic.

Griff 07-17-2002 02:38 PM

Yah, but who's gonna weave that nifty asa arm patch?

NateXLH1000 07-18-2002 09:30 PM

Electron microscope
 
I think that in order for an electron microscope to function properly, the sample has to be plated with a metal film. Also, inside an electron microscope is a vacuum.

You will just have to face facts that those innocent insects died for the sake of art.

jaguar 07-19-2002 01:12 AM

is it an electron microscope?

russotto 07-19-2002 02:06 PM

Naa, it's probably optical. If the gears are blood cell sized, the pic is well within the range of optical microscopes.

Bitman 07-19-2002 06:04 PM

Zoom zoom
 
I feel like quoting Slashdot here: "Doesn't Anyone REaD the ARtiCLE?!" (Yeah, I know there's no article, but still..) They only need a 200x scope for this stuff. At least, the live webcam is 200x, and the other pictures look about the same scale.

Tobiasly 07-19-2002 10:12 PM

If it's an optical scope, why aren't they in color? Oh, that's right, bugs see in black and white. No, wait a minute..

Go to the Image Gallery link.. the second picture from the top has some text at the bottom that looks like what would come from an electron microscope.

Of course, it's been a few years since I've pretended I was a chemist, so I could be wrong.

juju 07-19-2002 11:10 PM

Their website explains a bit about their microscope. But it's in scientist-speak, and I can't decipher it. :)

jaguar 07-20-2002 12:53 AM

Well if its *not* an electron microsocope, why is there no colour. If it is, why are there movies of the bugs moving?
I looked on the site, couldn't find anything conclusive so....

juju 07-20-2002 01:14 AM

Their website says that the microscope is capable of capturing clear images of the gears even if they are moving at high RPMs. This allows them to take several pictures in a sequence and determine how fast the gear is moving.

Anyway, if you're really curious you can call them up. :) Their phone number is on the site.


MaggieL 07-20-2002 09:02 AM

The microscope is optical. (There's a picture of it on the site.) Probably the imaging is monochrome to keep the digital size down.

Tobiasly 07-21-2002 10:04 AM

I just assumed the microscope used to take the still, black-and-white images wasn't the same one used to do the moving-gears movies, since the images look completely different and the magnification appears to be orders of, um, magnitude apart.

Undertoad 07-21-2002 10:22 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Griff
Yah, but who's gonna weave that nifty asa arm patch?
I read this a couple of times before it struck me: the micro-machine will weave the patch.


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