“…However, bubbling events consistently involve multiple phases and take place at the nanometer and up to nanosecond scales (especially at the nucleation stage); [ 8 ] these characteristics make it one of the most difficult occurrences to be directly investigated. Common experimental probes, including both spectroscopic (e.g., Raman) [ 1b,9 ] and imaging methods (e.g., atomic force microscopy (AFM) and optical microscopy), [ 7b,10 ] have been utilized for the characterizations of static bubbles (i.e., postmortem examination), whereas the nanobubbling dynamics have also been studied by various optical microscopes (for example, single nanobubble formation by optical microscopy, [ 11 ] nucleation and growth of individual hydrogen nanobubbles by super‐resolution fluorescence microscopy, [ 12 ] and nucleation of single nanobubbles at the sub‐second timescale by surface plasmon resonance microscopy. [ 8a ] ).…”