A Boy and His Atom

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A Boy and His Atom
An image of a small boy on the right made out of silvery dots against a gray background, with a single dot on the left
The atom (left) and the boy
Directed by Nico Casavecchia
Distributed by IBM Research
Release dates
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  • April 30, 2013 (2013-04-30)
Running time
1 minute
Language English

A Boy and His Atom is a 2012 stop-motion animated short film released on YouTube by IBM Research. The movie tells the story of a boy and a wayward atom who meet and become friends. It depicts a boy playing with an atom that takes various forms. One minute in length, it was made by moving carbon monoxide molecules viewed with a scanning tunneling microscope, a device that magnifies them 100 million times. These two-atom molecules were moved to create images, which were then saved as individual frames to make the film.[1] The movie has been recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the World's Smallest Stop-Motion Film.

The scientists at IBM Research – Almaden who made the film are moving atoms to explore the limits of data storage because, as data creation and consumption gets bigger, data storage needs to get smaller, all the way down to the atomic level. Traditional silicon transistor technology has become cheaper, denser and more efficient, but fundamental physical limitations suggest that scaling down is an unsustainable path to solving the growing Big Data dilemma. This team of scientists is particularly interested in starting on the smallest scale, single atoms, and building structures up from there. Using this method, IBM announced it can now store a single bit of information in just 12 atoms (current technology takes roughly one million atoms to store a single bit).[1]

Synopsis

At the beginning of the film, subtitles introduce the audience to how and why the film was made. When the action starts, we see a boy meeting an atom. Hesitant at first, he dances for it to the film's musical accompaniment, then bounces it around like a ball. The atom drops to the ground, and forms a trampoline, which the boy bounces on. The atom reforms, and the boy tosses it into the sky, flying past clouds and the word "Think", a longtime internal IBM motto.[2]

Creation

A large black spherical object with a slightly smaller red one merging into it from the right
Diagram of a carbon monoxide molecule

A Boy And His Atom was created by a team of IBM scientists – together with Ogilvy & Mather, IBM's longstanding advertising agency – at the company's Almaden Research Center in San Jose, California.[3] Using a scanning tunneling microscope, Carbon monoxide molecules were manipulated into place on a copper substrate with a copper needle at a distance of 1 nanometer.[4] They remain in place, forming a bond with the substrate because of the extremely low temperature of 5 K (−268.15 °C, −450.67 °F) at which the device operates.[5] The oxygen component of each molecule shows up as a dot when photographed by the scanning tunneling microscope, allowing the creation of images composed of many such dots.[4]

The team created 242 still images with 65 carbon monoxide molecules. The images were combined to make a stop-motion film.[2] Each frame measures 45 by 25 nanometers.[4] It took four researchers two weeks of 18-hour days to produce the film.[5]

The graphics and sound effects resemble those of early video games. "This movie is a fun way to share the atomic-scale world," said project leader Andreas Heinrich. "The reason we made this was not to convey a scientific message directly, but to engage with students, to prompt them to ask questions."[4] In addition, the researchers created three still images to promote Star Trek Into Darkness—the Federation logo, the starship Enterprise, and a Vulcan salute.[2]

Reaction

Guinness World Records certified the movie as The World's Smallest Stop-Motion Film ever made.[4] The film was accepted into the Tribeca Online Film Festival and shown at the New York Tech Meet-up and the World Science Festival. Now in the top 1% of all most-watched YouTube videos, the film surpassed 1 million views in 24 hours, and 2 million views in 48 hours, with more than 27,000 likes.

Implications

While the film was used by the researchers as a fun way to get students interested in science, it grew out of work that could increase the amount of data computers could store. In 2012 they had demonstrated that they could store a bit of computer memory on a group of just 12 atoms instead of a million, the previous minimum.[5] If it became commercially viable, "You could carry around, not just two movies on your iPhone," Heinrich said in a companion video about the film's production, "you could carry around every movie ever produced."[6]

See also

References

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  6. Moving Atoms, at 2:55.

External links