Not exact matches
In this scenario, a collision between two large objects
sends out a spray of
tiny dust
particles.
In most materials, including copper and other metals that conduct electricity, electrons navigate an obstacle course of microscopic outcroppings, ledges and other imperfections that obstruct the
tiny particles and
send them scattering in the wrong directions.
(Twenty - seven kilometers of tunnel underground Designed with mind to
send protons around A circle that crosses through Switzerland and France Sixty nations contribute to scientific advance Two beams of protons swing round, through the ring they ride»Til in the hearts of the detectors, they're made to collide And all that energy packed in such a
tiny bit of room Becomes mass,
particles created from the vacuum And then...)
A prototype device developed by an international team of engineers can sift exceedingly
tiny particles from blood samples without having to
send samples off to a lab.
The device
sends a
tiny amount of silver nanoparticle tracers in rapid pulses through a solid column, simulating the much longer path the
particles would travel in a well.