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fuzziness or movement? sorry if it sounds stupid, its a serious question

2007-11-03 22:24:51 · 4 answers · asked by confused 1 in Science & Mathematics Physics

4 answers

Human eye cannot see things smaller than about 100 micro meters. The electrons are billions of times smaller than this. You see things by the scattering of incident light by the object. Visible light waves are too large to be scattered by electrons.

2007-11-03 23:20:16 · answer #1 · answered by A.V.R. 7 · 0 0

Atoms is the smallest of all things known.
The atoms nucleus and electrons are smaller STILL.Constructed together form a solid mass.
Still stationary mass of matter.
What to know how small an nano is?

2007-11-04 05:38:27 · answer #2 · answered by Ronnie Wrench 4 · 1 0

you can see fuzziness and movement, if you can look close enough. but we cant.

think of it like this, if you were in outer space, and looked down at earth, would you be able to see cars on the road moving, or people walking around with your naked eye? no. if you had a high powered camera you could though, thats what satellites do.

2007-11-04 05:35:45 · answer #3 · answered by wtjui 3 · 3 1

Lol, well you'd think so, I'll ask my science teacher.

2007-11-04 05:34:12 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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