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The Golden Age in Cancer Nanobiotechnology: Quo Vadis?
Published 2015“…Since Richard Feynman and his famous talk “There’s plenty of room at the bottom” in an American Physical Society meeting at Caltech in 1959, Nanotechnology has led to the development of novel materials and devices with a wide-range of applications, especially in imaging, diagnostics, and therapy, which contributed to the early detection and treatment of cancer and metastasis (Ferrari, 2005; Conde et al., 2012a; Schroeder et al., 2012).…”
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Nature Abhors an Empty Vacuum
Published 2004“…The ideas about field and particle are original; Richard Feynman persuaded me to consider fields instead of forces, but is not responsible for my compromise on potential surfaces. …”
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One photon stored in four places at once
Published 2012“…Some of quantum physics’ deepest mysteries – or, according to the iconic Richard Feynman, its only mystery – arise when that observation is made with a single particle that, although indivisible, must have passed simultaneously through both slits. …”
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Elastic strain engineering for unprecedented materials properties
Published 2015“…By controlling the elastic strain field statically or dynamically, a much larger parameter space opens up for optimizing the functional properties of materials, which gives new meaning to Richard Feynman’s 1959 statement, “there’s plenty of room at the bottom.”…”
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Engineering Models to Scale
Published 2017“…Main Text The physicist Richard Feynman famously wrote, “What I cannot create, I do not understand,” at the top of his final blackboard. …”
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