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Mar 18, 2009: Even rounder thing
Not to overshadow Bruce but while trying to figure out how you make a perfect sphere I found a site where they do that.
And to spoil the surprise... you grow it. http://www.vaillife.net/assets/cella...tsphere.03.jpg http://www.csiro.au/news/PerfectKilo...iaRelease.html Quote:
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http://www.csiro.au/science/ps35k.html Quote:
http://www.acpo.csiro.au/avogadro.htm And some very detailed information on where the scientific community is at on defining/redefining the mass of a kilogram. For right now it seems that the silicon sphere is not the standard and that they still use the old platinum/iridium weight as the International Standard. http://www.bipm.org/en/scientific/mass/faqs2_mass.html |
it's SCIENCE!
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If the scientists can learn to make them smaller, they can play a perfect game of Chinese pinball.
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All this talk of balls is making me hungry.
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Wow, for once something reflective was posted without the obligatory naked-guy-with-a-camera reflection.
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They grow a cylinder and cut grind and polish it down, pretty much by hand. |
Tomorrow's IotD ... Roundestestest object evah ......
LUMBERJIM! |
Cool, thanks Coign. :thumb2:
I'm confused, the first link says; Quote:
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Yesterdays balls were round within 40 atomic layers, and I have no idea how to compare nanometers to atomic layers. I suppose it would make a difference what material it was 40 atomic layers of. Anyway, my balls ain't round. |
A nanometer(nm) is 0.000,000,001 meters.
An Angstrom is 1/10 of a nanometer. A silicon crystal has a nucleus to nucleus spacing of 5 Angstroms. Or 0.5nm. So an "atomic layer" is about 0.5nm. 40 atomic layers ~ 20nm. |
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makes the time i drew that perfect circle seem lame in comparison.:sniff:
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And to Spuck and Bruce, if the Gravity guys didn't get their measurements wrong than the balls Bruce found would actually be rounder than the Silicon weight ball so Bruce's post is still rounder. |
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The idea of making anything, any size, and knowing exactly how many atoms it contains... paging Gene Roddenberry. :haha: |
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It's probably what they meant by 'atomic layer' but not technically correct. The Gravity Balls were quartz, lattic parameter 0.49 nm. X-ray diffraction is my main occupation now, I can do a 'can you tell what it is yet' of diffraction patterns if you like.:rolleyes: |
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