IBM Scientists Create Tiniest 3-D World Map
1,000 of the maps could fit on a grain of salt IBM scientists working across three countries have created the smallest-ever 3D map of the world -- so tiny that 1,000 maps could fit on a grain of salt. The map, measuring 22 by 11 micrometers, is scratched out on a polymer surface. Every 8 nanometers corresponds to 1,000 meters of altitude -- so Mount Everest would be about 64 nanometers high. The map is composed of 500,000 pixels, each measuring 20 nanometers square. The patterning process could conceivably be used for nano-scale electronics and medical devices. The breakthrough was in how the scientists decided to build the map. IBM scientist Urs Duerig says in a company video that his "a-ha" moment was in realizing he could make 3-D shapes by removing material rather than adding to it. A tiny silicon tip attached to a cantilever is heated as it approaches...