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The Most Sensitive Scale Ever Can Measure The Mass of One Proton

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By Sarah Zhang
Apr 4, 2012 6:45 PMNov 19, 2019 9:20 PM

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The smallest named unit in the metric system is the yoctogram, equal to 0.000000000000000000000001 grams. (Yes, that's 24 zeros.) For a scale that can measure differences in mass as small as a yoctogram, which is on the order of the mass of a proton, physicists writing in Nature Nanotechnology turned to the wunderkind of nanotechnology

: carbon nanotubes. Carbon nanotubes are tiny---though not quite yoctogram-tiny---sheets of carbon rolled up into a cylinder. When an atom or molecule is placed on a vibrating carbon nanotube, the nanotube's resonance frequency changes depending on the molecule's mass. The sensor works at temperatures below -200 Celsius and in a vacuum, which eliminates the possibility of gas molecules bouncing around and messing with measurements. A yoctogram scale is just another use among many for carbon nanotubes, which contribute to everything from paper-thin loudspeakers to killing cancer

, to super fertilizer

, solar cells

, electricity-generating fabric

, water filters

...the list goes on and on

. [via New Scientist

]

Image via Shutterstock / Mr.X3dart

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