See nano pics at www.mems.sandia.gov
An international team of scientists has partially restored blind hamsters' sight using nanotechnology. Basically, the scientists built a tiny trellis of nanoparticle fibers that enabled the hamsters' severed optic nerves to regrow. The fibers were just 5 to 10 nanometers wide.
It's the latest example of the potential of nanotechnology. You probably know that nanotechnology involves building and manipulating super-small materials and machines. But just how small is nano small? Let's look for a little perspective.
Of Miles and Millimeters
Traditionally, human beings have measured the world in lengths ranging from a few millimeters (the size of a red ant) to a few miles (the distance you can walk in an hour). So a meter we can imagine. It's the height of a kindergartener. One-hundredth of a meter, a centimeter, is about the width of your pinkie. And one-thousandth of a meter, a millimeter, is pretty much a large grain of sand. But try to measure anything much smaller than that and you're going to need a microscope--not to mention some "tiny" terms.
Micro Means a Millionth
One-thousandth of a millimeter--one-millionth of a meter--is called a micron (or micrometer). If you could mark microns off on a ruler, 25 of them would stretch a little less than a thousandth of an inch. Human hairs are generally between 20 and 200 microns wide, while a single strand of a spider's web is 5 to 10. Many bacteria are just a micron or two long--small enough to stretch out with several friends on your split ends.
Nano Dwarfs That
A nanometer is one-thousandth of a micron--one-billionth of a meter (nanos is Greek for "dwarf"). To imagine how small that is, think of it this way. To find something a thousand times taller than you--the difference between a nanometer and a micron--you'd have to look at a mountain. To find something a billion times taller than you--the difference between a nanometer and a meter--you'd have to measure yourself against the sun.
If you were just a few nanometers tall, those bacteria stretched out on your split ends would look like a stack of skyscrapers. And the width of the human hair they're lounging on would dwarf the highest mountain you've ever seen (even if you live in Nepal). What could possibly be that small? Well, two nanometers is the diameter of a DNA helix--just wide enough to encompass the code of life.
Steve Sampson
March 17, 2006
Want to learn more?
Explore a nanoworld image gallery
Compare the size of all things
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