Imagine you have a tiny box that can hold thousands of messages, like a mailbox but for atoms. Scientists use special tools to make changes inside the atom, kind of like writing notes in it, so each little change can be a message or letter. This lets one small atom store many pieces of information at once, like a super-smart storage unit.
Examples
- A single atom can hold the same information as a whole book if you write very tiny notes inside it.
- Imagine an atom as a mailbox that can store thousands of letters at once.
- One atom is like a mini library, each change in its electron level represents a new message.
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See also
- How Can a Single Atom Hold Thousands of Images?
- How are advanced computer chips manufactured today?
- How Do Computers Remember Everything?
- How Do Quantum Computers Actually Work?
- How Do QR Codes Work?