yes
The smallest particle of an element that can exist either alone or in combination with other elements is an atom. Atoms are composed of protons, neutrons, and electrons.
When viewed through a microscope, atoms and molecules do not appear as solid spheres. Atoms are composed of a nucleus surrounded by a cloud of electrons, while molecules are made up of atoms bonded together in specific arrangements. These structures are too small to be directly observed using a traditional light microscope due to their size and the limitations of optical resolution.
Elements are formed from atoms.
The scanning tunneling microscope has a small probe which actually more like "feels" the size of the atoms and reads this out on a computer screen. The probe can pick up individual atoms. IBM used a STM years ago to spell I B M with uranium atoms and took a picture of it. But one does not actually directly "see" the atoms.
A scanning tunneling microscope (STM) can visualize atoms and molecules in well-ordered arrays. It operates by scanning a sharp metallic tip very close to the surface of a conductive material, allowing it to detect the tunneling current that occurs between the tip and the surface. This technique enables the imaging of individual atoms with high resolution, making it a powerful tool in nanotechnology and materials science.
If you could examine a mineral with a powerful microscope that reveals atoms and ions, you would see the arrangement of individual atoms within the crystal lattice structure of the mineral. This would give you insight into the bonding between atoms, the types of elements present, and the overall crystal morphology of the mineral at a microscopic level.
Usually, a scanning electron microscope is used to observe atoms.
The smallest particle of an element that can exist either alone or in combination with other elements is an atom. Atoms are composed of protons, neutrons, and electrons.
You cannot see an atom visually with a microscope. They're smaller (quite a bit smaller, actually) than visual light waves. The instrument that's used to "see" atoms is called a scanning tunneling microscope, but it doesn't use visible light, it uses electrical potentials and the pictures are generated by computer processing of the data.
They could use an electron microscope or an STM (scanning tunneling microscope)
No. No matter how powerful an optical microscope is, it can never be used to see atoms. Atoms are smaller than the wavelength of visible light. You can, however, view atoms using an electron microscope.
electron tunneling microscope
the electron microscope can measure atoms
I suyppose that this is the atomic force microscope.
They view atoms through an electron microscope.
Essentially, this is because the particles are too small - only with the most powerful electron microscopes can larger atoms be seen.
no