Take a large cup sans handle. Twist-lock a similar but smaller cup to its side. Connect an even smaller cup to the smaller cup. Continue ad infinitum. The cups slanted sides cause the cup chain to build a fractal spiral that functions as a handle for the largest cup being used.
Choose a foremost cup for a grande latte or piccolo espresso, or use them as measuring cups, curled together in the drawer. Buy one a day and spend the rest of your life collecting the whole series.-- FarmerJohn, Apr 18 2005 sketch http://www.geocitie...ie/fractalcup.html? [FarmerJohn, Apr 18 2005] "On the fiftieth day of Christmas, my true love sent to me, a cup 12 microns across." </sings>-- moomintroll, Apr 18 2005 Would this take an infinite amount of material, or not? I don't remember...-- RayfordSteele, Apr 18 2005 You can collect the whole Mandelbrot set.-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, Apr 18 2005 Eventually, you'd get a cup made of about 7 atoms. (a 3x3 atom cube with the center and on top-middle atoms removed)-- DesertFox, Apr 18 2005 [desertfox] surely that's a 25 atom cup?-- jonthegeologist, Apr 18 2005 Nah, you can get down to four. Arranged in a pyramid, there'd be a tiny... oh, wait - does it count if the space is too small to hold an atom?-- moomintroll, Apr 18 2005 agreed [moomintroll], [desertfox] and I were thinking of a cubic system.
The space would have to be small enough for a drink, after all, what's the point of a cup if it's not a recepticle for fluids. So, it has to be large enough for a molecule (or atom) of a potable fluid. I reckon that'll be a single water molecule.
I don't know if your 4 atom arrangement would work - which element are you suggesting?-- jonthegeologist, Apr 18 2005 Perhaps a monomolecular fullerene mug composed of an oxy-terminated half-buckyball?-- Freefall, Apr 18 2005 This is the best idea ever.-- JesusHChrist, Apr 20 2005 Hah, good point [jon] - if we make the pyramid of very big molecules, then... erm... can't be bothered to do the geometry, frankly. How big is a gold atom?-- moomintroll, Apr 20 2005 random, halfbakery