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Nano-Scale Canadian Flag Sets Guinness World Record

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Sep, 2016 12:14 PM
    Canadian scientists have a set a world record for creating a tiny national flag measuring about one-hundredth the width of a human hair, ahead of the country's 150th anniversary next year.
     
    Guinness World Records granted the inaugural award for smallest national flag to the Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) at the University of Waterloo in Canada for the flag measuring 1.178 micrometres in length. It is invisible without the aid of an electron microscope.
     
    Nathan Nelson-Fitzpatrick, nano fabrication process engineer at IQC and Natalie Prislinger Pinchin, a student from the Faculty of Engineering created the flag on a silicon wafer bearing the official logo of the Canada 150 celebrations using an electron beam lithography system.
     
    "The future of Canadian technology is firmly set in the quantum world and at the nano-scale, so what better way to celebrate the lead up to 2017 than with a record-setting, nano-scale national flag," said Tobi Day-Hamilton, associate director of communications and strategic initiatives at IQC.

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    Blackberry Meets With Shareholders At Annual Meeting, 1 Day Before Earnings Release

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    Religious Leaders In Saskatchewan Concerned About Assisted Dying Policies

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    Housing Advocates To Ask Ottawa To Rethink How Country Counts, Tracks Homeless

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    Toronto Police Chief To Apologize For '81 Raids Targeting City's Gay Community

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    Crews Working Hard To Repair Flood-damaged Roads In Northern B.C.

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    Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure Todd Stone released the following statement today on the continued highway operations work to repair damage caused by severe and unexpected flooding in Northern British Columbia:

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    Field Coaching Program Helping New Officers Learn The Ropes In Surrey

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    With a rapidly growing population, five policing districts, and a land mass two and half times bigger than Vancouver, the City of Surrey can be a daunting place to learn policing. 

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