AlpineFive-Seven
-
Posts
4 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Character Archive
Frequently Asked Questions
Equestrian Empire Character Archive
Golden Oaks Memorial Library
Pony Roleplay Characters
Events
Blogs
Posts posted by AlpineFive-Seven
-
-
What the hell?
GET OFF MY BED!
Now it smells like horse...
- 1
-
I'm here Feel free to add me if you want I'm currently silver elite master because I deranked from gold nova master due to the new match making system
silver elite master?
You're lucky. I'm a few ranks down at Silver 1.
-
My Favourite Mane 6 Pony: Rainbow Dash
How did you find MLP Forums?: A friend of mine who used to be on the forums (sevens or something like that) that I know at school recommended me to this website after telling me about the community.
How you became a fan of My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic: The same person who introduced me to the site introduced me to the show a month earlier. And I tell ya, I couldn't go away...Hyello!
I'd rather not say my name, but i'm Alpine.
I'm 15 years old and live in the central valley.
I do a lot of gaming, centered around CSGO (which i suck at) and TF2.
- 7
SEGA interested in Sonic/MLP crossover.
in Sugarcube Corner
· Edited by AlpineFive-Seven
The seven-tonne, 4.5-metre tall Scanning Transmission Electron Holography Microscope (STEHM), the first such microscope of its type in the world, came to the university in parts last year,. A team from Hitachi, which constructed the ultra high-resolution, ultra-stable instrument, spent one year painstakingly assembling the STEHM in a carefully controlled lab in the basement of the Bob Wright Centre.
Herring viewed gold atoms through the microscope at a resolution of 35 picometres. One picometre is a trillionth of a metre. This resolution is much better than the previous best image with 49-picometre resolution taken at the Lawrence Berkley National Laboratory in California, and is about 20 million times human sight.
The STEHM allows researchers to see the atoms in a manner never before possible. It has full analytical capabilities that can determine the types and number or elements present, and high-resolution cameras for collecting data.
If I were to use that microscope I still wouldn't be able to find why this is a good idea.