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    A Boy and His Atom: A short film made using only microscopic particles by IBM researchers

    IBM researchers have of late been studying atomic data storage but this time round they took a short break to work on something a bit more lighthearted: a stop motion movie made entirely out of atoms. The film, aptly named A Boy and His Atom, was created by arranging atoms with a scanning tunneling microscope and then capturing the arrangement as an image, magnified to over 100 million times its actual size. The final outcome is a brief 242 frames that show a charming story
    of a boy dancing and playing with an atom. Before its debut today, IBM even had the Guinness World Records verify the short as the “world’s smallest movie.”

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    IBM is accompanying the film with a series of short videos explaining the technology that was involved in creating it. In the videos, the team discusses how the microscope is able to both view and manipulate the atoms using a needle and electric current. Though the technology that the team discusses isn’t new, they were able to use it in a new way: the black-and-white images and playful music form a strong artistic style that’s reminiscent of early film, but at an entirely
    different scale.

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