Author here for all your CT scanning questions :-)
Genuine question: the website doesn't work in Russia. Did you restrict the access or is it my ISP doing that? Someone tries to prevent me from studying of very niche info on ancient Intel CPUs. Thanks! P.S. Big fan of your work!
What kVp/mAs do you use for this? How are you avoiding the artifacts seen from medical imaging? Curious, in school for CT in the medical field.
Does it look like the almost connected pins could have been purposely severed during production? ie: could they have been connected and then using a calculated pulse of power, disconnected?
Is the CPU destroyed by the process or did you reassemble this particular specimen?
What is the last node/cpu that had the smallest features visible at optical microscope scales?
What CT scanner was used? The images are surprisingly detailed for something so small, while we are used to coarser scales of human anatomy.
What is your CPU's yearly deductible?
This isn't about CT scanning, but about the chip itself.
Since the bond wires are just hanging out in air, does this mean that a chip like this could be ruined by dropping it which might cause the bond wires to move enough to short something?
Thanks for all your hard work!