Submitted by Sariel007 t3_yzd1pl in Futurology
Comments
No_Formal_8697 t1_iwzb5ke wrote
Wouldn’t it be awesome if it could measure their frequencies and then find the anti frequency to cancer cells?
myusernamehere1 t1_ixnz6es wrote
It would be awesome if that was something that was possible
[deleted] t1_ix249vl wrote
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FuturologyBot t1_iwzajl1 wrote
The following submission statement was provided by /u/Sariel007:
>A new prototype “quantum microscope” may one day analyze matter with unprecedented detail, researchers say. The novel device may one day probe the performance of next-generation atomically thin 2D electronics, and run MRI scans on molecules to help gain key insights for medical breakthroughs, a new study finds.
>Quantum microscopy uses quantum sensors to map the magnetic, electrical, thermal, and other features of samples at microscopic scales. In the new study, researchers developed a prototype quantum microscope based on flakes of hexagonal boron nitride. This ceramic often finds use as an insulating material in atomically thin 2D electronics.
>The prototype microscopy system places hexagonal boron nitride flakes 10 to 100 nanometers thick on top of samples. These samples possess defects wherein boron atoms are missing. When these negatively charged vacancies are illuminated with a green laser beam, they fluoresce with near-infrared light. Magnetic, electrical, thermal, and other disturbances can alter this response, allowing these defects to help serve as sensors. Each hexagonal boron nitride flake is essentially an array of sensors.
Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/yzd1pl/quantum_microscopes_could_enable_atomscale_mri/iwz70uu/
[deleted] t1_ix2wiug wrote
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Mcflymarty447 t1_ix673tt wrote
What are some of the medical implications of this? Would it improve surgery/ cancer detection?
Glodraph t1_ix0lyqq wrote
In the next news, helium is going to finish in less than 100 years and we won't be able to do MRIs anymore lmao but we prefer wasting it in stupid baloons
OmenInABox t1_ix1kt55 wrote
Recent development but we have found new ways of producing/harvesting helium. We are no longer in danger of losing this resource.
[deleted] t1_ix26hst wrote
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Glodraph t1_ix2pj7c wrote
Oh, must have missed that! Can you provide and article or something for me to read about this?
OmenInABox t1_ix2q5s7 wrote
First thing at the top of Google results https://www.cpvmfg.com/news/reliable-helium-supply-extracting-helium-from-carbon-dioxide/
Sariel007 OP t1_iwz70uu wrote
>A new prototype “quantum microscope” may one day analyze matter with unprecedented detail, researchers say. The novel device may one day probe the performance of next-generation atomically thin 2D electronics, and run MRI scans on molecules to help gain key insights for medical breakthroughs, a new study finds.
>Quantum microscopy uses quantum sensors to map the magnetic, electrical, thermal, and other features of samples at microscopic scales. In the new study, researchers developed a prototype quantum microscope based on flakes of hexagonal boron nitride. This ceramic often finds use as an insulating material in atomically thin 2D electronics.
>The prototype microscopy system places hexagonal boron nitride flakes 10 to 100 nanometers thick on top of samples. These samples possess defects wherein boron atoms are missing. When these negatively charged vacancies are illuminated with a green laser beam, they fluoresce with near-infrared light. Magnetic, electrical, thermal, and other disturbances can alter this response, allowing these defects to help serve as sensors. Each hexagonal boron nitride flake is essentially an array of sensors.