I found what Dr. Gimzewski had to say to be very interesting. I enjoy hearing from other professors here at UCLA. Before this week’s material I had very minimal knowledge on nanotech. I did not know almost every aspect of science and technology is impacted by nanotech. The Dr. also explains that it is the Greek word for dwarf and was originally used in a conference by Norio Taniguchi. Norio Taniguchi of the Tokyo Univreisty of Science used the word in a conference in 1974.
He increased my understanding by explaining nanotechnology using a logarithmic scale and an atom.
He also tells us how the concept of nanotechnology first appeared during a talk by Richard Feynman. This talk occurred on December 29, 1959. His talk detailed the ideas of moving and manipulating atoms one by one. I also was made aware that the laws of physics change and quantum effects dominate. I was unaware that by changing the sizes you are changing the laws that they follow.
Resources
“Gimzewski, James K.” Gimzewski, James K. | UCLA Chemistry and Biochemistry, www.chemistry.ucla.edu/directory/gimzewski-james-k.
Feder, Barnaby J. “The Art of Nanotech”. The New York Times, 25 Jan. 2008, bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/01/25/the-art-of-nanotech./
Panjwani, Laura. “R&D Special Focus: Nanotechnology.” Research & Development, 28 Mar. 2018, www.rdmag.com/article/2018/02/r-d-special-focus-nanotechnology.
“Richard Feynman and the Pleasure Principle.” The New Atlantis, www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/richard-feynman-and-the-pleasure-principle.
V
esna, Victoria. Gimzewski, Jim. "The Nanomeme Syndrome: Blurring of Fact & Fiction in the Construction of a New Science." 23 May 2019, vv.arts.ucla.edu/publications/publication/02-03/JV_nano/JV_nano_artF5VG.htm.






