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QINGDAO TODAY
在线翻译:
szdaily -> Tech and Science -> 
Researcher builds world’s smallest ‘gingerbread house’
    2019-12-25  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Some people go big with their holiday decorations. Travis Casagrande goes in the opposite direction.

In a feat of skill and technology, the research associate at the Canadian Center for Electron Microscopy at McMaster University has created and stacked two richly detailed decorations, yet both of them together are barely taller than the diameter of a human hair.

Casagrande cut and etched a “gingerbread house” from silicon, complete with sharply defined bricks and trim and a Canadian flag for a welcome mat. It may be the smallest house ever created.

The tiny new wonder, as a set of dramatic photos reveals, is in turn resting like a small cap on the head of a winking snowman that Casagrande made from a material used in lithium-ion battery research.

The final photo reveals that the snowman is standing beside a human hair that looks like a redwood trunk by comparison.

Under intense magnification, Casagrande dug out the pieces of the decorations with a beam of charged gallium ions, which acted like a sandblaster.

Casagrande drew national attention in 2017 for a similar display of skill and technology when he used the same equipment to carve a tiny Canadian flag flying from a pole, all set inside an almost imperceptible hole in the back of a penny.

While the spirit of the new decorations is festive, the intention of the project, Casagrande explains, is to demonstrate the capabilities of the center, which is a national facility with a suite of 10 electron microscopes and other equipment used mostly for materials research by Canadian and international users from both the academic and industrial sectors.

Unlike a traditional desktop microscope that focuses light through optical lenses, an electron microscope uses an electron beam and electromagnetic lenses. The wavelength of these electrons is roughly 100,000 times smaller than that of visible light, allowing far greater magnification.

Casagrande hopes the holiday project will stir scientific curiosity among the public and let other researchers see what the center is capable of doing.

(SD-Agencies)

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