Quantum Tunneling

Quantum tunneling is the quantum-mechanical effect of transitioning through a classically-forbidden energy state. The classical analog is to go through a wall, which happens in the quantum world but not with typical matter. One of the major applications is in electron-tunneling microscopes (see scanning tunneling microscope) used to see objects that are too small to see using conventional microscopes. Electron tunneling microscopes overcome the limiting effects of conventional microscopes (optical aberrations, wavelength limitations) by scanning the surface of an object with tunneling electrons. Tunneling is a source of major current leakage in Very-large-scale integration (VLSI) electronics. This results in the substantial power drain and heating effects that plague high-speed and mobile technology.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
lexus sc
black sheep
san jose municipal stadium
rustamid
michael madsen
washington hunt
medical laboratory
yellow billed oxpecker
cranium (board game)
dora
myron h. clark
new zealand foreshore and seabed controversy
durin's day
adagio for strings
mimico, ontario
chestnut tailed starling
paul waner
holden monaro
etobicoke creek
rudolf caracciola
dori seda
long tailed glossy starling
al simmons
cape dutch
korean measure words
fecal occult blood
purple glossy starling
cheapass games
joe medwick
shorei ryu
monolithic system
ibrahim ali
ra 90
kusum kangguru
renfield
weston, ontario
inside the park home run
trollhunter
zen intergalactic ninja
vladimir feltsman
down periscope
proletarian internationalism
bourgeois nationalism
trekking peak