A Boy and His Atom

Chris Robinson on IBM scientists dipping their toes into the art of computer animation, starting small.

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A Boy and His Atom

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On its surface the one-minute animation film A Boy and His Atom doesn’t look like anything special or new. Composed entirely of what appear to be silver balls, it shows a boy dancing and playing with a silver ball before he tosses it into the sky where it forms the word “Think.”

Insert slow, sarcastic ‘golf clap’ after the film ends.

A Boy and his Atom looks like it could be a high-school film, a lost Norman McLaren or René Jodoin experiment from the early days of the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) or a variation of the 1970s video game PONG.

Look deeper, though – 100 million times or so – and you’ll spot something astonishing about this film: The Boy and His Atom was made entirely out of atoms by a team of IBM scientists.

The folks at Guinness – the records people, not the brewers, have officially deemed it The World’s Smallest Stop-Motion Film. Okay, I change my golf clap to a full clap accompanied by a wide-eyed look of astonishment.

The atoms were manipulated using a device called a Scanning Tunnelling Microscope (STM) – which sounds like something a proctologist will be using on me in the future. The STM, whose development earned a couple of IBM eggheads a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986, is described “as a needle that drags atoms across a surface using magnetism.” A copper plate was used as the surface of the animation while carbon monoxide provided the most stable atoms for animating.

Pretty impressive – nay, mind-blowing – stuff (IBM has since done some Star Trek-related pieces as well), but what does it mean for animation?

A Boy and His Atom follows in a long tradition of collaborations between animation and science. In fact, one of the first computer-animation films, Hunger (Peter Foldes, 1974), was made collaboration between the aforementioned NFB and scientists at the National Research Council of Canada. While A Boy… is a nifty little experiment that expands animation’s technical arsenal, will it have any significant impact on animation? IBM scientists seem more interested in using the movie as a way of promoting IBM and having a bit of fun with their STM. Hopefully the response to the film will encourage them to seek out animation artists to collaborate on more enriching and stimulating works of art.

Originally published