A portrait of Professor Stephen Blundell with a generated background

Seeing the quantum nanoworld

23 Sep 2025
Public talks and lectures
Alumni events
Undergraduate events
Graduate events
International Year of Quantum
Time
-
Venue
In person and online
Speaker(s)

Professor Stephen Blundell, University of Oxford

Knowledge of physics?
No, knowledge of physics not required
For more information contact

Quantum Materials Public Lecture

The Quantum Materials Public Lecture given by Professor Stephen Blundell is part of this year's Oxford Symposium on Quantum Materials; both registrants to the symposium and the general public can attend the lecture for free. This public lecture is part of the Quantum Materials Public Lectures series (see previous ones QM Oxford - YouTube). 

Registration: The lecture theatre is now fully booked.  However you can watch it live online via Zoom at https://zoom.us/j/99572015573 

Seeing the quantum nanoworld

What does it mean to “see” atoms?  How have we reached a stage in which it is possible to perform microscopy down to the atomic level?  And what do we learn by doing this?  The fascinating story that will explain this involves a question that has long been debated in Oxford, dating back to the seventeenth century when Robert Hooke became one of the first practitioners of the optical microscope: is light a particle or a wave?  In the twentieth century, physicists asked the same question of electrons.  The modern microscopy techniques that will be described utilise an effect called tunnelling, in which particles can behave like ghostlike entities, passing through solid walls.  It’s often described as a counter-intuitive quantum mechanical effect, but in fact originates in classical nineteenth century physics.  Now these methods are being used to unravel the mysteries surrounding the newly discovered materials of the twenty-first century, whose behaviour is fundamentally quantum-mechanical.  

THE LECTURE THEATRE IS NOW FULLY BOOKED