What is the smallest particle which can be visually observed

In summary, the smallest particle that can be visually observed with a microscope depends on the type of microscope used. With an optical microscope, the resolution is limited to a few hundred nanometers. However, more indirect methods such as x-ray and scanning tunneling electron microscopes can achieve resolutions of a few tens of nanometers or even a tenth of a nanometer. It is also worth noting that our visual understanding is limited and can be extended through other senses and technology.
  • #1
Gary Smith
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What is the smallest particle which can be visually observed with a microscope?
 
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  • #2
What kind of microscope?

Optical?
Electron?
Scanning tunneling?
 
  • #4
I do not know how objects of observation appear through an electron microscope or scanning tunneling. Will Google images.

I am looking for the smallest particle which can be seen visually, as it is, by any means.

Images of atoms I have seen are all artist's representations.

The latest I heard, DNA molecules also cannot be visually seen.

But then, having no experience, I don't know where the line is crossed from actually seeing a particle to conceptualizing it.

Thank you.
 
  • #5
phinds said:
You might find this interesting:
Thanks!
 
  • #6
Gary Smith said:
What is the smallest particle which can be visually observed with a microscope?
It depends on what you mean by "visually observed". Without qualification, most people will understand the term to mean optical observation: Light from the object being observed is directed through a system of lenses to the retina of the eye to form an image. By that definition, the resolution is limited by the wavelength of visible light to a few hundred nanometers.

However, if you're willing to accept more indirect methods we can do much better. For example, x-rays have a shorter wavelength so x-ray microscopes can resolve objects as small as a few tens of nanometers; we cannot visually observe the x-rays but we can and do use them to expose photographic plates that we can visually observe. Scanning tunneling electron microscopes form their images even more indirectly, but have resolutions of a tenth of a nanometer or less.
 
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  • #7
Found some images of atoms, but don't know what I am seeing. Would upload if it were possible. One is a blurred shadow. I would not call it seeing the atom as it is. The other is quite interesting, and looks very different than artists' conceptions. Of course, a static image cannot convey movement. It looks like a honey comb and the description says, 'Bond-Order Discrimination by Atomic Force Microscopy," Leo Gross et al, Science, September 2012.'
 
  • #8
They say "seeing is believing" but our visual appreciation is actually very limited in both ways (large and small scale). it's difficult to draw the line at what's 'visible'. I would say that it's just as valid to say we can 'see' atoms with an electron microscope as to say we can only just manage to see some of the smallest invertebrates (unaided eye). Human acuity varies a lot from individual to individual. My youngest son can see stuff that no normal human can see. I think he must have elven genes in there somewhere.
On the large scale, we can't actually 'see' our galaxy, if that has to imply awareness of the form of it - 'we cannot see the wood for the trees'. The confusing array of twinkling dots that we see on a dark night is completely impossible to make sense of without 'learning the system'. But we can model the Solar System and we can even map the Universe - at least give a representation of direction and distance of things.
Also, we don't need our eyes to 'image' things. Our tongues give us an excellent 'picture' of the inside of our mouths although our eyes never get to look in.
 
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  • #9
Gary Smith said:
It looks like a honey comb and the description says, 'Bond-Order Discrimination by Atomic Force Microscopy," Leo Gross et al, Science, September 2012.'
Those images are made by taking the electrical signals coming out of a fairly complicated experimental apparatus and plotting them on a video screen. They'll be hyped as "visual images" but they're better thought of as a visual presentation of non-visual data, like any other graph.
 
  • #10
Google " scanning tunneling microscope images" and you'll see lots of them. But as the others said, they stretch the definition of visual images.

In the famous image below, they not only show the atoms, but they pushed them around into a dot matrix pattern.

Microscopy5.jpg
 
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  • #11
sophiecentaur said:
They say "seeing is believing" but our visual appreciation is actually very limited in both ways (large and small scale). it's difficult to draw the line at what's 'visible'...

I love it!

Good to remind myself of these things.

Maybe my whole premise is off. I was exploring the idea of the normal range of human awareness. Most people know 'of' molecules and atoms, but the range of felt experience for most people is probably no smaller than the cell. Would it be accurate to say that what cannot be perceived over the senses becomes conceptual? Not to say that what cannot be visually seen does not exist! But what people can relate to in daily life...
 
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  • #12
Gary Smith said:
I love it!

Good to remind myself of these things.

Maybe my whole premise is off. I was exploring the idea of the normal range of human awareness. Most people know 'of' molecules and atoms, but the range of felt experience for most people is probably no smaller than the cell. Would it be accurate to say that what cannot be perceived over the senses becomes conceptual? Not to say that what cannot be visually seen does not exist! But what people can relate to in daily life...
Is the Moon only a conceptual sphere but a flat disk in daily life? Does Antarctica exist only conceptually for most people? What is the purpose of your question?
Anyway, the one big difference between humans and animals is exactly the ability to understand things beyond our personal experience. Trying to stop using this ability will do you no good.
 
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  • #13
Gary Smith said:
I love it!

Good to remind myself of these things.

Maybe my whole premise is off. I was exploring the idea of the normal range of human awareness. Most people know 'of' molecules and atoms, but the range of felt experience for most people is probably no smaller than the cell. Would it be accurate to say that what cannot be perceived over the senses becomes conceptual? Not to say that what cannot be visually seen does not exist! But what people can relate to in daily life...
This is an interesting topic. Imo, there is too much made of our visual sense. The picture we build in our minds tends to be 'played back' to our consciousness as a TV picture and that makes us conclude that the model is visual. This would imply that people, blind from birth, would have no spatial conception at all, which is clearly nonsense - and quite insulting to someone (not me) who travels into Central London daily and negociates the transport and road system to visit new places regularly.

"but the range of felt experience for most people is probably no smaller than the cell." That's possibly true but not because of scale. It's because most people have just not grown familiar with the layout. To my mind, it's a bit like the fuzzy picture that people have of the engine compartment in their car or the inside of their laptop computer. (Compare that with how a mechanic or computer technician will visualise it) That is to say, the pictures in our minds are metaphors (borrowing from the computer vocabulary) and sighted people will often employ 'visual' metaphors. But the metaphors are not always visual. If I tell you to think about the lower surface of the pillow on your bed, you will 'feel' the geometry of your virtual house and then your memory will probably present you with tactile image of putting your hand in there (to reach for your gun - perhaps) or possibly the smell of clean sheets - but not what it would look like.

I think that there may actually be a very limited range of authentic visual one-to-one perception so perhaps your original question would need to be better defined - is it about what your eye can actually see in detail or is it about what you can 'perceive' with the help of memory and technology.
 
  • #14
I think that still leaves things undefined. You have a progression from naked eye, to naked eye with glasses, to magnifying glass, to microscope, to camera attached to a microscope all the way to atomic force microscopy. Where in this progression do you draw the line? And how do you ensure other people draw the line in the same place?

This is more philosophical than physical.
 
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  • #15
Thread closed for Moderation...
 
  • #16
Thread re-opened.
Vanadium 50 said:
This is more philosophical than physical.
Let's try to keep the philosophical issues out of this thread. Thank you. :smile:
 
  • #17
berkeman said:
Thread re-opened.

Let's try to keep the philosophical issues out of this thread. Thank you. :smile:
Perhaps we should replace the word "philosophical" with "perception and memory" or some such.

We need to avoid thinking of vision in terms of the school level of images forming on the back of the retina and the big deal about the image being upside down!. There is so much more involved in our visual perception.
 
  • #18
Gary Smith said:
I was exploring the idea of the normal range of human awareness.
Without getting into precise details about how small something can be to be "visible", consider this:

The range of direct human experience is so incredibly narrow in the overall scheme of things that we evolved with absolutely no survival value of (and thus no reason to learn) things very small (Quantum Mechanics), things really big and far away (cosmology), and things really heavy (black holes). Because of this it is often the case that not only is our "common sense" / "intuition" totally wrong it is in fact counter-productive and has to be rejected in order to learn these things.
 
  • #19
Phinds,

That is very helpful. It feels I am on thin ice in the PF, as my natural bent is philosophical and I can wander into it readily without realizing the distinction between what to me are normal thoughts, and the standards of PF. I would like to respond further to your comment but honestly don't know what I can write without violating the mission of PF. I have been relying heavily on intuition, and would like to find ways to test concepts using the protocols of physical physics.
 
  • #20
Whatever concept it is that you want to test, you have to be able to define it technically, not philosophically.
 
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  • #21
@Gary Smith , is your interest in the OP of this thread :
  1. the physics of vision?
  2. or the technology of visual presentation?
  3. or what a a small particle really looks like?
  4. all the above.
  5. none of the above.
 
  • #23
Gary Smith said:
I do not know how objects of observation appear through an electron microscope or scanning tunneling. Will Google images.

I am looking for the smallest particle which can be seen visually, as it is, by any means.

If I'm not mistaken this is an image with one of the highest magnifications (if not the highest);
it depicts the orbital structure of a hydrogen atom (which consists of one proton and one electron),
taken with a "photoionization microscope":

(the proton is located somewhere in the red center area, and the electron somewhere in the light blue orbital areas, and what I intended to illustrate with this example is that we have no images of the individual particles themselves)

18ontxblfw77lpng.png


Article on PRL: Viewpoint: A New Look at the Hydrogen Wave Function
Source paper: Hydrogen Atoms under Magnification: Direct Observation of the Nodal Structure of Stark States (PRL).

I may have some bonus clips for you too, which might interest you, will post them in a while...
 
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  • #24
Two bonus clips from me:

Moving Atoms: Making The World's Smallest Movie (IBM)


Atomic Switch (moving individual atoms) (Sixty Symbols, University of Nottingham)
 
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1. What is the smallest particle that can be seen with the naked eye?

The smallest particle that can be seen with the naked eye is the grain of dust, which is about 50 micrometers in diameter.

2. Can we see individual atoms with the naked eye?

No, individual atoms cannot be seen with the naked eye. They are too small to be seen, even with the most powerful optical microscopes.

3. What is the smallest particle that can be observed using a light microscope?

The smallest particle that can be observed using a light microscope is about 200 nanometers, which is the size of a small virus.

4. Is it possible to see particles smaller than atoms?

Yes, particles smaller than atoms can be observed with the use of electron microscopes. These include subatomic particles such as electrons, protons, and neutrons.

5. What is the smallest particle that has been observed by scientists?

The smallest particle that has been observed by scientists is the quark, which is a fundamental building block of protons and neutrons. Quarks have a diameter of less than 10^-18 meters.

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