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Author Topic: Error in Camera to Print video  (Read 4879 times)

loesch

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Error in Camera to Print video
« on: February 14, 2008, 12:40:24 pm »

In file 2 on printers, Michael and Jeff are describing the size of a picoliter.  They discuss whether it was a millionth or billionth of a liter, and decide on the former (millionth of a liter).  In actuality, they are WAY WAY off.  A picoliter is a millionth of a millionth of a liter.  A microliter (which is the same as a millionth of a liter) is in scientific notation 10-6 of a liter.  A picoliter is 10-12.  Either way, Jeff was right when he said it was an extremely small drop size.
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Schewe

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Error in Camera to Print video
« Reply #1 on: February 14, 2008, 01:30:03 pm »

As neither Michael nor I are actual scientists (we do sorta consider ourselves artists after a fashion) you should always verify, for yourselves, anything that comes out of our mouths...

How's this?

Picoliter

A picoliter is a trillionth (one millionth of a millionth, or 10 to the -12th power) of a liter, which can be represented numerically as 0.000000000001/liter. The prefix pico denotes a trillionth part, just as the prefix nano denotes a billionth part. Measurements on the scale of nanoliters and picoliters are used in microfluidics, the branch of nanotechnology dealing with extremely low volumes of liquids. Strictly speaking, when measurements such as picoliters, picometers, and picoseconds are involved, the correct term is the less familiar picotechnology.

Among the possible applications of liquid measured to such tiny volumes is the lab-on-a-chip, a device about as big as a shirt button that performs laboratory functions on a microchip platform. One such device, the Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer, uses reagents (chemical species that change as a result of a chemical reaction) in picoliter volumes moving through microchannels etched into a glass chip. A more common use for picoliter-scale volumes is in printers; inkjet printers typically use ink droplets that measure somewhere between 2 and 25 picoliters, with smaller droplets enabling higher resolution images.

Above from: WhatIs.com

:~)
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DarkPenguin

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Error in Camera to Print video
« Reply #2 on: February 14, 2008, 01:34:26 pm »

Quote
As neither Michael nor I are actual scientists (we do sorta consider ourselves artists after a fashion) you should always verify, for yourselves, anything that comes out of our mouths...

Well I'm from Kansas and your lack of scientific credentials in this regard clearly gives you expert credentials in this regard and I will believe anything you say on the subject.

(Just kidding.  I don't want anyone to think I'm from Kansas.)
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Eric Myrvaagnes

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Error in Camera to Print video
« Reply #3 on: February 14, 2008, 02:29:45 pm »

Sounds like a picoerror to me. Or is it a nanoerror?
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-Eric Myrvaagnes (visit my website: http://myrvaagnes.com)
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