How good would a digital camera need to be to be able to zoom in far enough to see atoms? assume that the shutter speed is equally as fast. how fast would the shutter need to be to be able to see electrons without being a blur? Would it be possible to see strings?
Regardless of your magic imaging chip resolution, visible light is not going to be able to resolve atomic scale detail. Unless this magic imaging chip is sensitive to the frequency of wavelengths able to resolve this level of detail you’re wasting time.
A “camera” in the usual sense cannot see individual atoms. It can only see things larger than the wavelength of light it is sensitive to. Which is why electron microscopes are used for looking at very small things. But even electron microscopes can only see things larger than, well, electrons.
Before the trademark police show up, you’re looking for a googolplex.
Handy interactive applet
Digital Camera Resolution Requirements for Optical Microscopy