There's Plenty Of Room At The Bottom

In 1959, Richard Feynman gave the first talk on nanotechnology, entitled There's Plenty of Room at the Bottomhttp://www.zyvex.com/nanotech/feynman.html. He considered the possibility of direct manipulation of individual atoms as a more powerful form of synthetic chemistry. Feynman considered a number of interesting ramifications of a general ability to manipulate matter on an atomic scale. He was particularly interested in the possibility of denser computer circuitry and microscopes that could see things much smaller than is possible with scanning electron microscopes. Researchers at IBM created today's atomic force microscopes, scanning tunneling microscopes, and other examples of probe microscopy and storage systems such as Millipede. Feynman proposed that it could be possible to develop a general ability to manipulate things on an atomic scale with a top-down approach. Use ordinary machine shop tools to develop and operate a set of one-fourth-scale machine shop tools. Use these to develop one-sixteenth-scale machine tools, including miniaturized hands to operate them. Continue on until the tools are able to directly manipulate atoms. This will periodically require redesign of the tools, as different forces and effects come into play. The effect of gravity will diminish, the effects of surface tension and van der Waals attraction will increase. He concluded his talk with challenges to build a tiny motor and to write the information from a book page on a surface 1/25,000 smaller in linear scale. He offered prizes of $1000 for each challenge. Unfortunately, his motor challenge was met by a meticulous craftsman using conventional tools— met the conditions, but did not advance the art. In 1985, Tom Newman, a Stanford grad student, successfully reduced the first paragraph of A Tale of Two Cities by 1/25,000, and collected the second Feynman prize. Feynman's talk did not describe the full nanotech concept, though. It was K. Eric Drexler who envisioned self-replicating nanobots in Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
propane
pan
precambrian
plasma
polymerase chain reaction
polymerase
pacific scandal
primer
purine
pyrimidine
play by mail game
philip k. dick memorial award
plugin
pierre teilhard de chardin
phutball
papyrus
pixel
prime number
per
piers anthony
perfect number
parthenon
pachomius
philosophical investigations
poul anderson
panspermia
philately
puget sound
public broadcasting service
perjury
phoenix (disambiguation)
phosphate
prime number theorem
private international law
pepsi
process church
timeline of programming languages
international fixed calendar
planetary science
potential energy
pyramid
predestination
primitive notion
priest